Rainfall
- 1st: 0.35"
- 3rd: 0.125"
- 4th: 1"
- 7th: 0.8"
- 11th: 0.9"
- 17th: 0.1"
- 19th: 0.5"
- 21st: 0.7"
- 26th: 0.1"
- Total: 4.575"
Temperature
- nighttime range: 68-75°F (20-24°C)
- daytime range: 78-94°F (25.5-34.5°C)
No complaints about August weather. We had good rainfall and generally cooler daily
temperatures than July. We only saw 90s during the first and last weeks
of the month. On the other hand, the higher humidity meant
that it felt just as bad as the 90s! What really helps is when it gets down to
below 70°F (21°C) at night because we can cool the house down, making it more tolerable during the day.
State of the garden
All I can say is, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Everything is overgrown and runaway so that it looks a mess. But almost everything in it is useful!
|
Hoophouse: The living shade you see is hopniss, cherry tomatoes, and morning glories. |
|
Also a volunteer winter squash, cultivated grape, and Chinese yams. |
|
My largest sweet potato squash so far. |
|
Inside the hoophouse are winter squash, Malabar spinach, violets, strawberries (back right bed) and cultivated burdock (back left bed.) |
|
Hugelkultur: winter squash, turtle beans, cherry tomatoes,
chicory, clover, morning glories, lambs quarter, & sunchokes. |
|
Hugelkultur closeup featuring squash and chicory. |
|
African keyhole garden: sweet potatoes and a survivor kale. The porch trellis is growing green beans and cherry tomatoes. |
|
I planted kale in the keyhole bed about a year ago. This is one of two plants that survived both our cold winter and hot summer. |
Picking and Preserving
|
Bucket full of cherry tomatoes, a few okra, and one lone pepper. |
The cherry tomatoes are still going gangbusters. I got bored with making and canning pizza sauce, so I'm switching to tomato juice and ketchup.
The cucumbers are done, so our salads, now, are cherry tomatoes and kale.
|
Tomato, kale, and black olive salad with homemade ricotta ranch dressing. |
The okra hasn't been very productive.
|
Okra is a member of the hibiscus family. |
I don't plant a lot, just enough to have
oven-fried okra
a couple times a week during growing season, with a little extra to freeze
for a side dish during winter. It hasn't produced that much, although it's
making a better effort now that our daily highs aren't so scorching and
we're getting a little more rain.
August is fig month, and these are the largest figs we've ever seen on our
trees.
They aren't all this size, but it's amazing to find them. Can't take any
credit, though, because the fig trees are pretty much on their own! They
are next to the goat barn, so perhaps they're getting some rich rain
runoff.
|
Breakfast: fresh figs on peanut butter granola with kefir. Sometimes we swap the figs for diced pears. |
There were lots to can. |
And dessert!
Fresh fig cake with vanilla goat milk ice cream. |
Pear harvest started in late July. The heaviest harvest was a couple weeks ago.
|
Bucket of pears. |
One year, I spent days in the kitchen canning chunked pears, but Dan wasn't very enthusiastic about them. So now, I just make pear sauce. It's easier and faster to do, and we both like it.
|
Cinnamon pear sauce. |
|
As pear picking slows and the pearsauce jars fill, I switch to drying them. Ditto for figs. |
|
The cores and peels are being made into vinegar. |
Elderberry harvest starts in late August.
|
First of the elderberries. |
I used the first of them to flavor my canned figs and pearsauce. I also freeze
them for jelly making this winter, and will make a couple batches of
elderberry wine. This year I want to try an elderberry pear wine. I've
experimented with adding other fruits for subtle flavor (of which some are
more likable than others).
And a few parting shots.
|
Buckwheat planted as a cover crop in my newest
swale bed. Only a few plants came up, so this will be my seed crop. |
|
Marigolds and a winter squash blossom. |
|
Our first Orange Glo watermelon of the summer. |
I picked the watermelon just the other day. They were planted late, and only
after my cantaloupe plants all died. I'm not sure what happened to them.
They were doing well until our hot dry spell. I watered them faithfully, but
they weren't happy and that was that. The watermelons have done much better
and we're just starting to enjoy them.
So there are the pictures to go along with my Summer Mantra blog post. I liked hearing about what you all have been up to in your gardens, so keep the comments coming. 😀
Garden Notes: August 2022 © August 2022