Final harvest

Olivia strains with our final tomato harvest. There have been plenty of fruits, though in the last week they have stubbornly held on to their green color. She is a good helper, harvesting fruit regardless of its shade and eating half of what she pulls. Juana separates the tomatoes into different paper bags according to […]

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End of season growth

The morning air is crisp and the sun is rising just a bit later and a tad to the east each morning. The equinox is but a few days away signaling the coming of Fall and the shutting down of garden growth. Yet each day, I find new signs of life. The morning glories have […]

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Golden rod

The golden rod is out in full bloom with bees, wasps and hornets taking full advantage to feed off its flowers. We have let large stands of it take over parts of the yard preferring its tall, spreading, leggy stems to more predictable plants that we would install. It is one of the few plants […]

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Abundant beach plums

This is the year of beach plums. Rather than having to fight off deer and other foragers for a slight handful of these tasty fruits, they are in obscene abundance. Every bush has clumps of these deep purple pitted fruits waiting for the taking. And take I do. Grabbing a bunch, like so many grapes […]

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Sagging sunflowers

With Labor Day approaching, I am starting to feel a bit like the sentinel-like sunflowers in the front yard. A month ago they were tall and erect, holding their heads high, soaking in rays. Now, each weighed down with hundreds of seeds, they are bent over appearing to have a vegetative osteoporosis. Their petals are […]

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Munching monarch

The monarch butterflies have not been too plentiful this season and I feel fortunate that I spotted one feeding on our butterfly bush. As it flittered between blossoms, I wondered if I would see any more this season.

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Cute caterpillars

The most common butterfly we have seen this year is the yellow swallowtail. Its distinctive yellow and black pattern is a constant in the garden flittering between the many flowers we have. But as the season wanes so will they. Now I see that a great many caterpillars have emerged, first on my celery plant […]

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Stupendous sunflowers

All the flowers are exploding with wild abandon, no doubt sensing that we are in the waining days of summer. Sunflowers, in particular, are taking their turn, poking their dinner-plate sized heads above the fence attracting bees and other pollinators. Ours seem a bit confused this year as only some have turned toward the sun. […]

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Summer of bounty

It is harvest time in the garden with vegetables, fruits and flowers ready to be picked. This is the Summer of tomatoes as 5 pounds of these fruits are ready for consumption each day. Beyond stuffing our faces with cherry tomatoes, the sauce tomatoes are bubbling on the stove and the large slicing tomatoes are […]

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A bug catcher

My grandson Charlie is showing off his Venus flytrap. I bought it for him the last time we visited as he was fascinated by this hungry plant. He has been a good caretaker of it as it has more than doubled in size. I will likely need to repot it next time we visit.

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