Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling.

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Default Rain

Had a dry day today so were able to get out in the garden without
getting wet. Just poked around a bit to see how things were going and
the garden is very lush. It should be with all the rain we received
yesterday. Was watching the weather man a little while ago, he said we
have received 67.8 inches of rain this year. Thankfully we didn't get
the nearly seven feet all at once. A couple of rain storms that dumped
at least eighteen inches in 24 hours was enough.

Put up some 4 pints of kumquat marmalade last week, our tree is not
growing much since we put in in 2013. Hopefully we will be able to
change that. I am going to deep fertilize the fruit trees this coming
spring in hopes the roots will go deeper into what passes for soil here.
I do miss the ancient sand dune we lived on in Louisiana, it was covered
with about twenty feet of fertile soil from the forests that grew there
for thousands of years.

We have vacuum bags of sweet chilies, squash, zucchini, etc. plus home
canned green beans and other veggies to carry us through until spring.
Spring here usually starts in late February to early March so it won't
be long until the spring garden goes in.

George
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On 12/14/2015 03:31 PM, George Shirley wrote:
> Had a dry day today so were able to get out in the garden without
> getting wet. Just poked around a bit to see how things were going and
> the garden is very lush. It should be with all the rain we received
> yesterday. Was watching the weather man a little while ago, he said we
> have received 67.8 inches of rain this year. Thankfully we didn't get
> the nearly seven feet all at once. A couple of rain storms that dumped
> at least eighteen inches in 24 hours was enough.
>
> Put up some 4 pints of kumquat marmalade last week, our tree is not
> growing much since we put in in 2013. Hopefully we will be able to
> change that. I am going to deep fertilize the fruit trees this coming
> spring in hopes the roots will go deeper into what passes for soil here.
> I do miss the ancient sand dune we lived on in Louisiana, it was covered
> with about twenty feet of fertile soil from the forests that grew there
> for thousands of years.
>
> We have vacuum bags of sweet chilies, squash, zucchini, etc. plus home
> canned green beans and other veggies to carry us through until spring.
> Spring here usually starts in late February to early March so it won't
> be long until the spring garden goes in.
>
> George


Hi George,

Our average rain fall is usually around seven inches.

67.8 inches !??! ¡Ay, caramba!

Do you ever bother to wash your car?

-T

I only have one container of vegis in the freezer from
this years crop. You are in inspiration.
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On 12/14/2015 6:44 PM, T wrote:
> On 12/14/2015 03:31 PM, George Shirley wrote:
>> Had a dry day today so were able to get out in the garden without
>> getting wet. Just poked around a bit to see how things were going and
>> the garden is very lush. It should be with all the rain we received
>> yesterday. Was watching the weather man a little while ago, he said we
>> have received 67.8 inches of rain this year. Thankfully we didn't get
>> the nearly seven feet all at once. A couple of rain storms that dumped
>> at least eighteen inches in 24 hours was enough.
>>
>> Put up some 4 pints of kumquat marmalade last week, our tree is not
>> growing much since we put in in 2013. Hopefully we will be able to
>> change that. I am going to deep fertilize the fruit trees this coming
>> spring in hopes the roots will go deeper into what passes for soil here.
>> I do miss the ancient sand dune we lived on in Louisiana, it was covered
>> with about twenty feet of fertile soil from the forests that grew there
>> for thousands of years.
>>
>> We have vacuum bags of sweet chilies, squash, zucchini, etc. plus home
>> canned green beans and other veggies to carry us through until spring.
>> Spring here usually starts in late February to early March so it won't
>> be long until the spring garden goes in.
>>
>> George

>
> Hi George,
>
> Our average rain fall is usually around seven inches.
>
> 67.8 inches !??! ¡Ay, caramba!
>
> Do you ever bother to wash your car?
>
> -T
>
> I only have one container of vegis in the freezer from
> this years crop. You are in inspiration.

Very seldom, it sits out on the garage apron mostly. Once in a while I
have to go out and wash the volcanic ash off of it. Two volcanoes in
Mexico sent a bunch of ash our way this year plus the weather folk say
we got some from Indonesia too. Very light, gray ash, easy to wash away
and the grass likes it.

I live fifty miles from the Gulf of Mexico and we have always gotten
lots of rain here in Southeast Texas. I joined the Navy in 1957 at age
17 and had never seen snow. Got to my duty station in January 1958 in
Maryland and there was snow everywhere. I still hate the nasty stuff, it
ain't natural where I come from. Of course we have a lot of hot days to,
that's why every house in this part of Texas has air conditioning.

Wife and I gardened with our parents and started gardening again just a
short while after our marriage. Come December 26 we will be married and
gardening together for 55 years and we're not tired of either chore yet. <G>
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On 14-Dec-2015, George Shirley > wrote:

> Wife and I gardened with our parents and started gardening again just a
> short while after our marriage. Come December 26 we will be married and
> gardening together for 55 years and we're not tired of either chore yet.
> <G>


Hi George,
Married on Dec. 26th. I'll bet you never forget your anniversary day :-)
John
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