70°f/21°C, an odd day of clouds, rain, humidity. Some places had flash floods, but we only had one string downpour and a few showers.
It has been a hard day. I woke too early, but hurting too much to stay in bed. I was outside before 9, doing more stringtrimming, picking beans, pulling beets and onions, and pulling some weeds.
This is a mix of Rattlesnake beans, Tenderette bush beans, and a few wax beans.
And finally the big tomatoes are starting to ripen! We've had small ones and cherry types, but no sandwich maters yet.
The cucumbers are not doing well: I am not sure if it's bugs or just too wet where we gave them. We are still getting plenty, but some of the vines are dying. The good news is that the seeds I planted the other day are already up, so at least there will be late cucumbers. I found a couple sturdy volunteer tomato plants too, so there will be late tomatoes. A blessing!
Everything is growing so fast now, especially grass and weeds. Larry is behind on mowing, and far behind on weedeating. He seems to have no interest in doing it, and I can't handle his big weedeater. The stuff he usually cuts is hard for my little trimmer, although he leaves more and more areas for me to cut. I have asked my son Derek to come do Larry's weedeating, but it really seems unfair since he has his own large yard to care for. Larry is capable, he just doesn't want to do it.
We said goodbye to our rabbits today. Try as I might, I could not get Larry to handle them properly for breeding, growing out, etc. I bought new, easy to use waterers but he wouldn't put them in. There were 4 to be dressed out a month ago but he put that off too, so now they are too big. I got him a book when we got the rabbits, and signed him up for some rabbitry groups, but he just didn’t bother to read up on how to care for them. With all I have to do, I could not add the rabbits to my list, so I called a friend who came and got them today---and I gave her those new waterers too.
She is coming back to get our chickens, as they have quit laying almost entirely. I will find some new hens after we get back from our Colorado trip in September, but for now the only critters we have are the dogs and the old cat. This will make it easier for Derek to take of things while we are away anyway. But it does seem odd to have no hens, as I have had chickens almost continuously since I was 19.
I got the beans all snapped, the beets skinned and cooked and ready to use, and the green onions chopped up and in the freezer. Now I need to get the carrots dug. Tomorrow, maybe.
Beyond all that, I finished up the big buffet I was working on, so it is ready to go to a booth. That and housework pretty well rounded out the day. Oh, and I cleaned up these chanterelles that Larry found along our driveway. I sautéed them and put them in the freezer to use later.
I had already made dinner, rabbit in an herb sauce over pasta. I did the rabbit and the sauce in the Instant Pot, which I am trying to get the hang of. It so tasty, and I will make this again with chicken.
I also made a couple quick breads this week, raspberry banana, and chocolate zucchini. So good! Both recipes made 2 loaves so the extras are in the freezer.
And I re-soaked my fruitcakes with brandy. They are still so delicious, and so rich! Of course we had to have a nibble of one of the dark ones. The light ones look good too, but we didn't taste them this time.
Besides all that food work, I did take time to read. I just caught up on The Assassin's Cloak, which I had fallen behind on. I am over halfway through it! I have said before, it is a fascinating look into the lives of various diarists, beginning with Samuel Pepys in the 1600s, and continuing until the 1990s, with entries for each day of the year.
I also finished Barbara O'Neal's When We Believed in Mermaids, but wouldn't recommend it. Too many stereotype characters for me. And I finished up The Postmistress of Paris by Meg Waite Clayton. I really enjoyed this novel about an American heiress who helped out in the French Resistance during World War II. It is actually based on a real person, and I though Clayton did an excellent job of research for this story that featured actual people who were workers in the Resistance, and artists trying to escape the Nazis.
That is all I have today. I am whipped, and intend to sit here and read the rest of the evening! Leaving with this thought:
“Few people know how to take a walk. The qualities are endurance, plain clothes, old shoes, an eye for nature, good humor, vast curiosity, good silence, and nothing too much.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson















