The scraping is mostly done and it is back to gardening. The vampires (weeds) have been vigorously propagating while I was sweating buckets on the ladder. It was time for war. Most mulches are gone with the wind in this land, but I think newspapers with sawdust on top will stay on terra firma. I did a test spot that squelched the vampires and stayed put in gusts up to 50mph. Now all I have to do is fill in the rest of the garden paths.
My teenage daughter not only helped with the scraping, but jumped in on helping with weeding as well. She unfortunately does not share my passion for gardening, so weeding is a display of love for her mother. With her lack of passion is an accompanying ignorance, but she was able to distinguish grass from tomato plants...I think.
While I was busy working my shoulders out, my peas where flowering and making pods. The pumpkin on the home page (in the wall of water) is starting to creep under the fence. The tomatoes are flowering and thriving, also.
Today as I was dancing in the garden, I discovered the latest emerging vermin. No-see-ums are now biting along with the flies. This casual relaxed watering time that turned into dancing caused me to reflect on clothing. A hundred years ago most people lived on farms and spent a great deal of time out of doors. They also worn more modest clothing. My admiration of that societies morality has been thrown into question. Where the long pants and skirts worn simply to survive no-see-ums and deer flies? Perhaps they were just practical instead of having moral cape and tights in their closets.
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