Good morning, my friends. There as a change of plans yesterday. Shortly after my morning blog posted, Matthew called to say he'd barely slept the night before. And I'm sympathetic to that. We decided to do our walk on Monday. No worries. I could switch gears. Only...I seemed to be stuck in neutral because I made almost no forward progress during the day.
There was a little progress to show on the Love Sampler. After stitching these two sections, I moved my hoop to the right. I'll pick it up there this morning, and then continue toward the bottom.
Our weather has been pretty gloomy this week, but there’s been no rain since last weekend. It seemed adviseable to give the flower pots some water. I noticed the volunteer snapdragons are coming back with a vengence.
We’re seeing more and more cherry tomatoes too. No clue why they were so slow getting started. The plant is huge.
I believe the foliage on the right will become a purple poppy. Back in 2020, I was able to get some to bloom, but none since. These seeds were some Mae saved from her own poppies. She and I have puzzled over this because they seem only to bloom as purple poppies once.
The Checkers dahlia is such an overachiever this year. I don’t think I’ve ever seen it produce so many flowers…and it’s early for dahlias too.
To it’s right, the Fuzzy Wuzzy dahlia has more work to do if it’s going to keep up.
This is the one I’m watching now. Bumble Rumble. We should be seeing some flowers from it by next week. There’s still one more dahlia…the Firefighter dahlia. It has some work to do to catch up with the others.
HEAR YE! HEAR YE! THE FIRST ZUCCHINIS HAVE MADE AN APPEARANCE! That is all. Please resume your regular activites.
In the bee garden, I noticed a new flower. My phone tells me this is Moricandia arvensis or “purple mistress” to you.
Here, I was able to get a better picture of the Checker Mallow. I posted a blurry photo last week.
The garden is looking good. The corn is visible in photos now, and the green beans are doing great after the crow battles at their beginning. There are way more beans than I usually plant, but that’s okay. After having all the plants bitten off in our last garden, and after fighting tooth and beak and nail for these, I’ll take all the beans I can get. I believe I’ve earned them.
Okay, by late afternoon I planted my butt in my sewing chair determined to do some quilting. I’d switched out my thread and was checking tension when I ran out of bobbin thread. Of course, I did.
Here’s a peek at the back.
When I’d stitched from left to right one time, I called it quits and left it needle down for the next horizontal sashing.
My goal today will be to finish all the interior sashings. I’ll save the border for tomorrow.
There was no more progress made on the Stair Steps. I’ll keep plugging away at it until I’ve finished the final two blocks…maybe today…maybe not. My sanity is important to me.
Also, today is the day we’ve chosen to harvest our cherry crop. I’m honestly not sure how much is out there. We have two trees: a Black Tartarian and a Bing. The Black Tartarian is always more productive, but there are some cherries on the Bing too. My plan is to can some of them in simple syrup. I use those to make my mother’s cherry cobbler…possibly my favorite dessert for my whole live-long life. Also, I’ll make some sweet cherry pie filling. Up until a couple of years ago, I always thought pie filling had to be made from tart cherries. Then I found a recipe for sweet cherry pie filling. I actually think I like it better.
So all of that to say that I’m looking at a weekend of canning. Sewing might have to take a back seat for a few days as I deal with the cherries.





















2 comments:
The poppies are so pretty, I grew them from seed one year, but for some reason, I haven't again, might try again next year. I made the Chocolate chunk Oatmeal cookies last night, doubled the recipe which ended up being five cookies. They are delicious, and I have no guilt eating one for breakfast.
Re the poppies. The leaves on the left look like perennial Oriental poppies, mine are bright orange, but I think they come in red, too. The leaves on the left are definitely ahe annual variety. They come in many colors and readily reseed, The red/orange shade seems to dominate in my reseedings. I've never had the purple ones, although I've bought the seeds before.
Your dahlias look great. Since you have them planted in pots, at some point you are going to need to dig them up and divide the tubers. More tubers are produced every year and eventually they will get too crowded and stop flowering. I stopped growing them as they have to be lifted and stored inside for the winter here. It just got to be too much work for an old lady.
Pat
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