The midsummer garden
The ground is brown and dry. Still, some plants are loving the sun....... and surviving with constant watering
This was a good start.
I'm picking a handful every day
All the tomatoes this year seem to be cherry varieties. Most of the plants came up by themselves from leftover salad I buried in pots.
All the skins are very tough. They're not great eating. I remove the skins and make relish.
While my brother and sis-in-law were here they bought a 750gram tomato from the supermarket. One tomato 3 greek salads. Nothing unusual for green fingered Rainy. She's grown a 650 gram tomato in her garden in New Zealand
My pot of basil is lovely green and bushy
These tiny lemons are falling off the trees already rotten. Not a good year for lemons.
Only good for the compost
My bonsai bougainvillia. I clip the new shoots every day. It grows like mad and if I leave it a few days the branches have thorns long enough to rip my arms to pieces. I already get attacked by the roses and the lemon trees. My right arm is a mess of gashes and bruises.
This bougainvillia is white and doesn't bloom till about mid September. Even though I keep on clipping away at it the plant will be covered in thick white blossoms till the end October
Scarab beetles love watermelon rind.
Here they're known as GoldenFlies. They're great big clumsy things. They fly around us at dusk and often end up on their backs when they fly into something. They are easily traumatised and have to be turned up the right way very carefully.
Pumpkins are slowly growing all over the garden
Cicadas start their shrill noise at 5.30am. Their noise increases till by midday its deafening. They finally go quiet just after dusk. Then we can hear the soft burr of the crickets.
Temperatures are rising again. It's going to be a week of blistering heat.
It's an alien world to me!
ReplyDeleteBlistering heat? What's that? 😁
I love the feta pic. I love feta with everything.
Don't come here in July and August!! I'm watching the weather report now. There are 43o and 44o s all over the country.
DeleteYou can freeze tomatoes 🍅 😋 if you get a glut. We did last summer. Smashing garden photos.
ReplyDeleteI buy tomatoes when they're cheaper, puree and freeze them. I'm pureeing and freezing apricots at the moment
DeleteThat heat sounds too much. What a shame about the lemons and tomatoes, though. Watermelon is delicious, with or without feta, which I really like.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn't sound as if you have much of a chance of a lie-in, with the cicadas revving up so early.
I get used to the Cicadas thank goodness. But midday they really are loud
DeleteI like your nice compact basil bush. I, obviously, don't pick mine enough as it is always straggle.
ReplyDeleteSometimes they straggle but this one is wonderful.
DeleteI spotted some marigolds too - bright orange explosions and I love the sharp smell of them.
ReplyDeleteOur neighbour gave me 2 marigolds and they're doing really well. I must get some more I'm more successful with flowers than with veges
DeleteYou have much more than we do.
ReplyDeleteIt's only a small garden. Most things are in containers. The soil isn't that Great.
DeleteI have recently received photos of my Tomatoes back in Brighton. There are plenty of fruits, but all still smallish and green. Roll-on September.
ReplyDeleteOurs are taking forever to go red. Hopefully yours will be picking perfect in September
DeleteLove cicadas, my sister and I use to collect their shells in jars when we were little, lots of fun. I have my marigold seeds in a container along with butternut and pumpkin ready for Spring.
ReplyDeleteI love finding their shells. Must take a photo next time I see one 😊
DeleteThe first time I heard a cicada was in Crete, many years ago. I was surprised by the intensity and duration of the noise. I discovered that after a while you get used to it. There are no cicadas here and for me it is always the sound of wonderful places.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you don't have Cicadas. They love the heat
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