Hi! It's August! Time flies when all you're doing is sitting around in your nice pajamas and messing with yarn.
A commenter on the last post wanted to know the ONE NEAT TRICK to make your tomato plants not look spindly and pathetic. What I learned from somewhere on the internet this past spring is that when you transplant your seedlings (or, in my case, the plants I bought from the farmers market), you dig a shallow, foot-long trench and then lay the first 10-12 inches of your tomato plant right in it and cover it with dirt.
That's right, just bury that stem, even if you are covering up some of the bottom leaves. Apparently, the entire length of the buried stem is capable of growing roots, so the plant establishes a much better root system that can take in more nutrients and water.
IT WORKED |
That's probably the most (the only?) useful thing anyone will have learned from reading my 16 (SIXTEEN) years' worth of blogging. YOU'RE WELCOME.
My recovery is progressing along in fits and starts, and yay I no longer have tubes coming out of my body, because those were really freaking me out. I'm doing my fun little post-mastectomy exercise routines I found on YouTube and walking to the store and running up the stairs so I can pretend I'm getting some aerobic exercise. Olympics, here I come!
I've also been pulling out all my yarn and strewing it everywhere, in an attempt to figure out what to make with it. The yarn situation could explain why I haven't blogged in 3 weeks, since I hate sitting at a messy desk and what do you know?
Yarn-covered desk |
MORE yarn on desk |
It's interfering with my muse, is what it is.
But I am working on socks (because, as always, WINTER IS COMING) and also my latest fave: the Stephen West Botanic Shawl. Now, Stephen West usually designs super-complicated, enormous patterns that take a lot of effort and brain power, so I have never knit anything of his, even though he is a very popular designer with the knitting community.
I'm a lazy knitter, is what I'm saying.
But this particular pattern happens to be simple, so I ponied up the money and bought the pattern and now I can carelessly say things like "Oh, I'm just working on my Stephen West shawl" like all the cool knitters do.
I'm a Stephen West knitter now |
Let's see, what else have I been doing?
I've canned some peach jam |
I've eaten my weight in these things, OMG, SO GOOD |
We called those Nona carts in Sicily and I loved mine. Also peach jam, yum. And yea for recovery!!! Anne, who is too lazy to sign in with google.
ReplyDeleteI don't know which is more pleasant to see - the height of the tomato plants, the beauty of the knitted things, your ability to look forward to make socks for winter, the ambitiousness of making peach jam, or the clever look of your cart. Best of all is hearing that your recovery is proceeding.
ReplyDeleteI must admit I am jealous about your Trader Joe's find - I have not seen any such thing like those peanut butter bites in my Trader Joe's.
They were carrying them in May, so we stocked up! It's useful having a Trader Joe's employee in the family (Susie), I must say
DeleteCommon Household Mom used all of the words that I had planned on using, so I'll just chime in with "Ditto!"
ReplyDeleteGlad to read you are on the mend! Hope Larry is too. I'm guessing that the Stephen West you mentioned is not the same person who produces the "Philosophize This!" podcast.
ReplyDeleteGood to hear you are well enough to go back to work!
ReplyDeleteGood to hear you're heading back towards "normal". I never knew that about tomatoes. The knitting looks spectacular, I know one stich. Anything past that gets bought from the store.
ReplyDeleteLove that you can say a cool thing like "Oh, just knitting this ol' thing here..." Glad you are recovering and finding things to do during the healing.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad recovery is going well. I loved this post. Looks like a summer of satisfying projects and treats.
ReplyDelete