Tag Archives: fall gardening

October update

Still gathering produce from the garden this autumn.

Autumn is my second favorite season (spring is my favorite).  I think it’s due to the brilliant colors, all those reds and oranges and yellows.  The garden is winding down but I’m still extending the season.  Frost was predicted last week (didn’t happen) but I covered the vegetable patch anyway.  Still getting some tomatoes and peppers.  They’re small but we’ll miss that fresh and juicy taste when the last one is gone.  I started a new crop of lettuce and spinach.  The spinach isn’t doing well but the bib lettuce is coming along.  We should be eating fresh lettuce in a week or so.  I know it doesn’t seem like much to most people when you can just go to the store and buy fresh lettuce, but still there’s the pleasure of picking my own. 

Covering the vegetable patch to prevent frost damage.

We lost all the peaches due to a late freeze this year but we’ve had a bounty of pears.  My husband has the patience to sit and process them for the freezer.  Future pies and cobblers.  I get the fun job of picking them with my long handled fruit picker, with the aid of my grandson who thinks it’s pretty special to dodge the fruit as it comes down.  The persimmons are also ripening.  I don’t particularly like persimmons but a lot of people around here do.  As do the deer and other night creatures.  If you don’t know, you have to have both female and male trees to pollinate them.  Just a fun fact.

The potted flowers haven’t given up yet either but they’re getting pretty straggly.  I like the roses that still put out an effort and a few late blooms.  And I did take a grandchild to the library to paint pumpkins.

A late-blooming climbing rose.

I returned from our trip to the Smoky Mountains last month inspired to paint many of the beautiful scenes that we saw.  Sunrise in the Smokies, mountain streams, just so many awesome vistas.  After a few small paintings, I printed some cards and painted some holiday scenes for a local gift shop and one of my Etsy shops.  Tis the season and most artists and craftspeople are busy this time of year.

Smokey Mountain Sunrise, Acrylic, 10 x 20
Mountain stream in the Smokies. Acrylic, 10 x 20.

And, hey, it’s fall break this week, too.  Hummm….guess I’ll cajole the grandkids to help me do some chores, like cleaning out the greenhouse and the shop.  Both of those tasks have been on the list all year.  Maybe pick up some walnuts for replanting.  I picked seven gallons of redbud seedpods which we’ll sow in the woods.  If you don’t have this beautiful understory tree in your area, I truly feel sorry for you.  A good excuse for a walk in the woods with the kids.

Anyway, I hope that you can get outside to enjoy the final warm days of the season wherever you live.

Traditional Arts Today in Ferdinand, Indiana

KitMiracleArt – one of my Etsy shops

September garden update

Cherry tomatoes from just two bushes, picked mid September.

Normally this time of year, the garden starts slowing down. Not this year.  Despite the record-breaking temperatures and drought, our garden is still producing.

Dried cherry tomatoes. A jar of yummy deliciousness.

While most of the regular tomatoes have slowed down, the cherry tomatoes are still coming on strong.  We have a debate whether the best ones are Sweet 100s or Sweet One Million.  They’re both delicious.  I have been drying plenty of them in the dehydrator.  I found the best and quickest way to dry them is to cut them in half and then gently squeeze out the seeds.  They will dry much faster.  We love to put them in bread or just eat them straight for snacks.  Yummm.

Fresh green beans from the second crop planted in mid-July.

And the green beans which I replanted in July have been coming in.  Amazingly, they’re better than the first batch we planted last spring.  Big and juicy and practically bug free.  I love green beans!

A multitude of peppers. Jalapenos, Anaheim, and sweet yellow peppers.

The peppers haven’t given up either.  We have jalapeno, Anaheim and sweet peppers.  A few of the hot peppers go a long way so we’re always glad to share them with the neighbors.

Sweet potatoes cluster, all from one slip. Variety Puerto Rican vining.

My husband loves sweet potatoes.  This clump is from just one slip!  And he planted fifty slips!  And they’re still growing (the vines haven’t died back yet).

Although the squirrels are harvesting most of our walnuts, I always feel a kinship as I “squirrel” away our garden produce.  Apologies for the bad pun.