Vegetables

General discussion area for all topics not covered in the other forums.
Post Reply
Philadelphia Eagle
Posts: 505
Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 8:50 am

Vegetables

Post by Philadelphia Eagle »

In one corner of our yard is a vegetable garden. It is mainly looked after by Mrs Eagle as I am a little restricted in just how much vegetable gardening I can do.

Yesterday I noticed much activity there and, as we have fresh vegetables and fruit where possible (Mrs Eagle is a trained restaurant cook and likes to prepare food using as many natural ingredients as possible), I trundled off this morning in my wheelchair to inspect the occupants of the garden.

At the present time we have a heightened Wildfire Advisory in this and several adjoining counties due to high temperatures and absence of rain and so last night the watering system for the vegetables was left on.

This morning I duly turned it off and proceeded on my way.

Our system can be either turned on/off at an exterior faucet or individually as each spray thas an on/off switch at its base close to the ground.

The disadvantage of this latter arrangement is that if someone were to be clumsy enough to strike the on/off switch with a hard object e.g. a wheelchair, the spray will immediately spring into life and soak the nearest person with water. In my case it was set at "Fine Mist"

Have you ever tried to turn off a spray which is soaking you while sitting in a wheelchair? It's not easy I can assure you.

However, the journey was well worth it in the end.

I found the following vegetables and fruit in various stages of develpment:

Corn, Cherry and Plum Tomatoes ( sun dried they taste delicious)

Garlic, Butternut Squash, Eggplant, Zuccini, various Peppers, Pumpkin, an amazing assortment of chiles - American, Mexican and Thai (Mrs Eagle being from South East Asia specializes in oriental cooking) and the peach trees have their annual crop forming on the branches.

How does your vegetable garden grow?
America the Beautiful :-6

website - home.comcast.net/~nmusgrave/
User avatar
cars
Posts: 11012
Joined: Sun Oct 03, 2004 12:00 pm

Vegetables

Post by cars »

Posted by Philadelphia Eagle:



I found the following vegetables and fruit in various stages of develpment:

Corn, Cherry and Plum Tomatoes ( sun dried they taste delicious)

Garlic, Butternut Squash, Eggplant, Zuccini, various Peppers, Pumpkin, an amazing assortment of chiles - American, Mexican and Thai (Mrs Eagle being from South East Asia specializes in oriental cooking) and the peach trees have their annual crop forming on the branches.

How does your vegetable garden grow?



- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

It doesn't! You guys are lucky & have a "green" thumb. I have a "Brown" thumb, everything I plant shrivels & dies! Your Garden sure sounds great, & nothing tastes as good as "fresh" vegetables right from the Garden!
Cars :)
Jives
Posts: 3741
Joined: Wed Jan 26, 2005 1:00 pm

Vegetables

Post by Jives »

Philadelphia Eagle wrote: Have you ever tried to turn off a spray which is soaking you while sitting in a wheelchair? It's not easy I can assure you.


America's Funniest Home Videos! :D

How does your vegetable garden grow?


When I was growing up in Montana, we had a vegetable garden the ssize of the Pnderosa Ranch, and it wasn't just for show either! We ate off it all Winter long. (Which possibly explains my life-long hatred of green beans)

I think my mother thought that if she grew stuff, and cooked it creatively, we wouldn't know we were dirt poor. Yeah right, like other families use eggplant to make french fries.

These days, although I have a huge yard the envy of the neighborhood with thirty foot pines, huge Sycamores, and giant flower hedges, the only edible thing in the entire yard is the five bushels of Peachcots we get from the peachcot tree in the front yard.
All the world's a stage and the men and women merely players...Shakespeare
john8pies
Posts: 1163
Joined: Thu Apr 21, 2005 10:53 am

Vegetables

Post by john8pies »

Another wonderful story Eagle. It reminds me of certain books with similar descriiptions by the likes of John Grisham and David Baldacci, and that song by Judy Collins about her grandmother`s farm in the 1950`s. Great stuff!
Post Reply

Return to “General Chit Chat”