Friday, July 23, 2010

Overtime Over, Now the Real Work Begins

A lot gets put on the back burner when you work two and a half months of overtime.  What has to get done, gets done ...what can wait, gets put off.  Yeoldfurt took up the slack for me with the day to day stuff.  Most days when I got home, he had dinner ready or very nearly ready.  He usually had the outside chores done too.  Most of the men I've known would complain if they were pulling kitchen duty for ten straight weeks, but Yeoldfurt was a trooper.  I'm very blessed!

Now that overtime is finished, it's time to tackle the long list of things that I need to catch up on.  The spring garden is done except for cucumbers and a few straggler green beans.  We planted chard a few weeks ago, but grasshoppers or some other little critter wiped out all but eight of the twenty we planted.  We are babying those eight plants and hope to have our first fresh chard with dinner in a week or two.  The cucumbers are going wild.  I picked about a dozen of the biggest ones a week or so ago and made bread and butter pickles with them last weekend.  It was hard to estimate how many jars I would need as some of the cucumbers were the size of a small zucchini.  I cut the bigger ones into spears and the smaller ones into chips but still had to cut the chips into quarters to fit them into the wide-mouth jars.  I ended up with eleven pints of pickles from those dozen cucumbers.  There's another dozen or so in the fridge and twice that many babies still on the vine.  I don't think we'll need to buy pickles for several years! 

We are re-working the raised beds for the next several weeks to make ready for the fall planting.  The soil needs to be turned, some fresh soil and compost added, and every visible weed removed.  When each bed is clean and prepped, we'll cover them with a tarp until time to replant.  Covering the beds will keep windblown seeds out and any weed seeds we might have missed will hopefully be baked out by the July and August sun on the tarps.  Weeding is the hardest part of gardening.  Anything we can do to keep weeds to a minimum is worth it to me.

In September, we will replant with green beans, chard, lettuce, sweet peppers, hot peppers, bell peppers, broccoli and onions.  I want to can the green beans and chard so the majority of the garden will be planted with those.  What broccoli we don't eat fresh, we will freeze or use to make broccoli cheese soup which we will then process in the canner.  What peppers we don't eat fresh, we will pickle, dehydrate or can and add them to the inventory.

I'm not a rank novice to gardening or canning, but I'm new enough to still be learn a little something with each project.  What I took from my efforts in canning those eleven pints of pickles was that organization at the outset is the key.  My kitchen is adequate for most of the cooking I do, but there is very little counter space.  When you have very little of anything, you have to be extra careful how you utilize it.  I was using three of the four burners on my stove and realized just before I was ready to start putting cucumbers in jars that I had arranged all my pots on the different burners all wrong.  I had to back up a step, rearrange things more efficiently and then wait for things to heat up again.  A learning process.  By the time I placed the second batch of jars in the canner, I was on a roll.

I also pick up tips from others that I read regularly.  Just this week, I found a useful little tip at one of my favorite gardening blogs, Country Living in a Cariboo Valley, in her post on Mulching Pathways.  If you are interested in gardening or self-sustained living, check out Annie's blog.  You will find her on my blog roll, or by clicking the link to her Mulching Pathways post above.  I don't think you'll be disappointed.

6 comments:

  1. Good to have you back, HB!

    Sounds like your garden did really well. I am being over run with zucchini and yellow squash. :)

    Hugs~Fel~

    ReplyDelete
  2. Considering it was severely neglected while I was on overtime, the garden is doing well. Glad yours is going well too!

    ReplyDelete
  3. We live on a hill by the river, there are huge trees, the ground is clay, rocks. I can barley get ground covers and shade plants to grow. I tried and tried for years to grow some tomatoes, but they don't get enough sun. It's not that I can't grow things, I was raised on a farm and can grow most any yard plants or garden plants, but not here.

    The Grouch loves fresh homegrown tomatoes.

    Enjoy all the fruits of your labors, they will certainly come in handy in the winter. I love Breat and Butter Pickles. My mother used to make great ones.

    Debbie
    Right Truth
    http://www.righttruth.typepad.com

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for stopping by, Debbie! Have you seen those Topsy Turvy Tomato planter things? Hanging basket of sorts for growing tomatoes ...might even be hydroponic ...guess I should have researched a little before I mentioned them. But even conventional planters might be your answer for the lack of deep topsoil. I bet if you tell the Grouch there's some fresh 'maters in it for him, he would start trying to figure out a way to make it work!

    : )

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yes I tried those hanging basket-thingies, they use potting soil. I also tried big flower pots, but they just won't do any good.

    As to the Grouch, we've been married almost 38 years so I can say with certainty, he is NOT going to try and grow anything. He's not an outdoor person except for fishing. He wants homegrown tomatoes, but not enough to try growing them himself, ha.

    He is a wonderful husband and we are very happy, always have been, he's just not a gardener or yard person.

    We have a neighbor who has been bringing us a few from his garden and they are so good. I make sure to keep him supplied with homemade brownies.

    Debbie
    Right Truth
    http://www.righttruth.typepad.com

    ReplyDelete
  6. That's the wonderful thing about being married to someone for a long time ...if you make it a long time, more than likely you're best friends, even soul mates. When it's your best friend or your soul mate, you understand them and accept them...even accommodate them (make brownies for the neighbor so the he keeps bringing tomatoes!) without trying to CHANGE them. Relationships are where it proves the old axiom, it is better to give than to receive ...because when your heart remains focused on giving to your spouse, you receive ten fold.

    : )

    ReplyDelete