gardening and the back yard

This has probably been the best spring garden I've ever had.

I've put up about 8 gallons of garlic/spice dills, and about 2 gallons of bread and butter pickled squash/zuchinni, with about 20 or 25# of squash in the refrigerator waiting to get converted to pickles. Not quite a bushel of green beans, and about 3 messes of purple hull peas so far. I've been really good about spraying weekly, so no stink bugs, no leaf-footed bugs, no tomato horn worms, no squash vine borers. But what I have had is effing mocking birds destroying about half my tomato crop.

I don't give a fig if they are the state bird. I'm gonna kill me some mockingbirds starting next March before they begin to nest.

I have hot banana peppers coming out of my ears, a decent set of jalapenos and bell peppers, and the eggplants are just starting to come on. Pulled up the green beans last weekend and planted 16 hills of okra. I ought to be able to put up 4 or 5 gallons of pickled okra.

About 2 more weeks, it'll be time to pot broccoli, cabbage, and cauli seeds, and fall tomatoes. And I'm toying with putting in some sweet potatoes this year. I just don't know where I'd store them. In the space I have, I should be able to harvest about 2 or 3 bushels of them.
 
eggplant parm
1749949667036.png
 
This has probably been the best spring garden I've ever had.

I've put up about 8 gallons of garlic/spice dills, and about 2 gallons of bread and butter pickled squash/zuchinni, with about 20 or 25# of squash in the refrigerator waiting to get converted to pickles. Not quite a bushel of green beans, and about 3 messes of purple hull peas so far. I've been really good about spraying weekly, so no stink bugs, no leaf-footed bugs, no tomato horn worms, no squash vine borers. But what I have had is effing mocking birds destroying about half my tomato crop.

I don't give a fig if they are the state bird. I'm gonna kill me some mockingbirds starting next March before they begin to nest.

I have hot banana peppers coming out of my ears, a decent set of jalapenos and bell peppers, and the eggplants are just starting to come on. Pulled up the green beans last weekend and planted 16 hills of okra. I ought to be able to put up 4 or 5 gallons of pickled okra.

About 2 more weeks, it'll be time to pot broccoli, cabbage, and cauli seeds, and fall tomatoes. And I'm toying with putting in some sweet potatoes this year. I just don't know where I'd store them. In the space I have, I should be able to harvest about 2 or 3 bushels of them.
@sgt_zim

I can sympathize, mocking birds are the tomato tax man and putting nets over a garden is a pain.

Get a space blanket and cut into strips 3/4 the height of the plant and about 1-1.5” wide, tie one end of the strip to the top of the tomato stake or cage so that it blows in the wind.

The reflection and motion screws up their depth perception and makes it harder them to land.
 
Excellent! We will be right behind you if the insects don't get ahead of us. I really enjoy fried yellow squash. A southern delicacy and one of the main reasons I help out in the garden. To be fair my ranch hand and my wife do most of the work.
 
Around here, the squash and zucchini have to be sprayed weekly or the squash vine borers will transmit bacterial and/or viral wilt to them, and they'd all be dead in under a week.

I finally pulled up my squash yesterday. We've eaten all we can eat, and given away a bunch more. Still about 20 lbs in the refrigerator that I need to get pickled.
 
IMG_3671.jpeg
The orchard is doing well and starting to produce. Sent the kids out to fight the birds off the cherries tonight
 

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2RECON wrote on Riflecrank's profile.
Hallo Ron, do you remember me? I´m Michael from Germany. We did some Wildcats on the .338 Lapua Case.
.375 i did, and a .500 and .510 you did.
Can you please contact me again (eMail please)

Best
Michael
 
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