It's been a busy summer. Probably the busiest I've ever had! Eventually I'll get around to back-posting about all the fun things we've done (maybe), but for now I need to start with the present. I've been feeling pretty down about the garden. It's been the hottest, driest summer on record here in Indianapolis. That's not really an exaggeration! It's been awful. We had major water restrictions all summer long. Most of our lawn was so dry and crunchy it was too painful to walk on barefooted. I watched our cilantro bolt and die. I did collect the seeds and they are currently drying out in a paper sack in my basement "root cellar."
I hand-watered our garden almost daily throughout the summer to keep it alive. So it stayed green, but not productive. We were desperate to get bell peppers this year! But we only got one fruit out of the three plants. One of my three tomato plants died, but the other two were big and tall. Yet, they only a yielded a half dozen ripe tomatoes. My zucchini and yellow squash were producing, which was a relief. And the basil plant was kept shaded by the squash leaves and was looking good.
Fast forward to today. These pictures were taken this morning. See how lush and green everything is? What a difference some rain can make!
Here are both the raised beds:
Two zucchini and two yellow squash have run a-muck and taken over the entire 4x8 bed AND crept out onto the path as well. I have squash coming out of my ears! As a result, we've tried many new squash recipes and been eating it for breakfast, lunch, dinner AND dessert.
Here are my 3 pepper plants. Supposedly red, yellow and green. I harvested two green peppers from the "red" pepper plant. Maybe they would have turned red if I waited, but they looked too good to leave on the vine!
These monstrosities are two tomato plants gone wild. Next year I will plant romas and hope they stay contained. I trimmed these back as they were literally out of control. There are a lot of green fruit, but only three ripe. If all the green tomatoes ripen, I'll be doing a massive happy dance!
Some weeks back, I planted four squares of lettuce but only three have really taken off. Humph. Oh well - I'm looking forward to some fresh salad greens in another week or two!
See those green plants with small white flowers in the back? Those are bush beans. I sowed those seeds the same time as the lettuce. Only two squares germinated, but they appear to be growing well. Bush beans will be a first for me and is more of an experiment than anything else.
I had given up hope on our pumpkin patch. It was so green and viney and full of flowers, but no fruit had appeared as of the first of August. Now, we have at least four pumpkins beginning to form and many female flowers tempt me to hope for more:
This is our biggest pumpkin dubbed: "Big Al." It's close to one foot long now.
Here's one of the smaller pumpkins, Little Al, about five inches in diameter:
Today's harvest of squash. We were gone over Labor Day weekend and came home to this! (And the fridge and freezer are already full of squash as it is...). Those long zucchini are about 14 inches, to give you some perspective on the magnitude:
Basil! Pesto is on the to-do list:
My jalapeno peppers have finally begun to grow and they look great. One of the three tomatoes harvested, I ended up pitching one since the bottom was too yucky. The others may go into a spaghetti sauce I make (augmented with tomatoes given to me by my sister-in-law and mother-in-law). Behold the two perfect green bell peppers. If that's all we get, though, I will seriously cry.