This is the Celebration!
This was last weekend (Aug. 28th), our town had it's annual Township Celebration and of course there is always plenty of food, games, entertainment and all are followed by a street dance, with a live band.
The weather turned rainy, so a quick change of plans and the fire hall was opened up and tables and chairs put in place.
Now to the Party!
It as you might have guessed, it was a potato digging party.
Our weather has been so wet( over an 1" and 3/10 in the last week) and cool, we were afraid the potatoes might begin rotting and with more wet and cold weather forecasted we opted to dig them this weekend. The picture above is of our Russets, they did quite well this season!
Nice baked potato size and we had several dozen this large or larger.
Here are the small and medium sized Caribe and the large Caribe spuds filled two 5 gallon buckets and a few more besides and we still have one more row( approx. 25 hills to dig) but it began raining. We hope to dig them in a day or so.
A close up of the medium and small Caribe spuds( approx. 250-300lbs. total of the Caribe and approx. 250+lbs. of Russets)
These are the two 5 gallon buckets of large Caribe
I can't believe how large they grew! This particular variety of potato stores very well and they are a purple skinned, with a white flesh, that is very firm.
Now for the Evil Eye!.......
It is mixed( it's a powder) with warm water to the consistency of honey and then applied to the hair from the scalp outward. You'll need to section off the hair and take it in small applications, brushing it onto the hair from scalp to the ends. Then you cover with a plastic bag( provided in the Henna) and place the client under a heated dryer for 45 minutes to an hour. Since I no longer work in a salon( haven't for 21 yrs) I have a mini version of a salon dryer
Tomorrow, we LABOR, Mike will be cutting firewood at a friends place, while Cortney and I harvest zucchini, raspberries, peppers, beans, cukes and if we have time pick some of our Painted Mountain Corn and hang it to dry in the garage. Sometime this week we'll harvest some of our Flat Dutch Cabbage heads and begin our first, 5 gallon crock of sauerkraut :o) I'm also working on getting seeds collected, experimenting with our TRUE potato seeds, planting our Fall green in the hoop house( after we remove some of the finished pepper plants and work in some well composted manure) and praying our tomatoes begin ripening in larger batches, so we can begin canning stewed tomatoes, juice and sauces. We also have chickens and turkeys to butcher, when we find the time*wink* I feel myself beginning to panic especially when we watch the evening weather report and at the 5,000 ft. level, SNOW is forecasted for tonight! That means a good chance of a heavy frost for us*sigh* When driving home for the city last week, we noticed that there is fresh snow on the mountains just 45 miles to our East. I'm NOT ready for this, it seems we've just begun to harvest and it may be over before we know it. PTL! for the hoop house at least our tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and cantaloupe are protected. Usually this time of year, I'm ready to be done because we've been harvesting and preserving since the end of July and all of Aug. This year we've been so behind( gardening wise) and we are blessed with loads of produce, it just needs a few more weeks of warmer temps to ripen it all up.
Blessings to each of you on your Labor Day weekend.
5 comments:
I just posted a long comment. I hope it did not get lost in cyber space! This is a test run...
~Faith
Sorry Faith, this is the only comment I received from you. It must be lost in cyberspace, doesn't it tick you off when that happens?
kelle,
the potatoes look great! fun day. and very cool on the henna - yes, it's a nice, natural way to do it and i bet courtney is happy! wow, fall is here for you... work fast and i hope you can get done everything you need!
I can't believe your are talking about snow already! I can't wait!!!!
Hopeful,
Cortney was so tickled with her soft and ultra shiny hair. I caught her looking at it outside in a mirror, yesterday*wink*
We had a freeze, not a complete killing freeze but it did however damage the cukes, zukes and pumpkins. I think summer is over for us, although it NEVER really showed up*sigh* We're working hard to make the most of what we've got ready before it's gone.
Now focusing on getting fire wood collected( it's already dry), split and stacked for winter. We're also hoping to get our pump with pressure tank,electrical, and a pump house built so we'll have water available at the barn and the cows trough.
SFG,
The mountains to our west received 3-5" of snow at the 7,000+ ft level and we received a heavy frost, damaging some of our garden stuff, but not a total kill.( whew) Of course the greenhouse is doing GREAT!
Blessings,
Kelle
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