The weather this past week was warm and perfect and Spring-like. It seems we have 1 more day of that to enjoy, because Tuesday the rain moves back in for almost the entire next week. We need the rain, we really do - Fremont has had just over 7" since July 1, and our annual average is over 17". All the rain in this part of CA comes in the Winter and Spring, so we still need more.
If you're coming to Stitches West, be sure to plan for rain.
It's not forecast to be the cold rain of the past few weeks, but it may be heavy: predictions are for 2 to 4" in the area.
Because the weather has been so nice, I've spent more time gardening than knitting. Our yard is large and there's always work to be done. This weekend I finished working on the Meyer Lemon trees. I still have branches that won't fit in the green bins this week, but the old lemons have been picked and the pruning is as done as it's going to get this year.
One of the things I love about lemons is that they will have blossoms, tiny baby lemons about the size of the nail on my pinky, unripe lemons in all sizes and ripe lemons - all at the same time. See the baby lemons at the upper left and right of the center?
I also planted the first crops in the vegetable garden today: head lettuce, red leaf lettuce and bright lights Swiss chard.
This is a raised bed made from a 5' x 3' Rubbemaid horse trough.
The next two photos show the entirely of the veggie garden (not including any fruit trees).
This area has 3 Rubbermaid raised beds and an 8' x 4' wooden raised bed. I'd planned to take the wooden beds out, but found that I preferred growing tomatoes in something closer to the ground since so many tomatoes grow tall.
One more wooden raised bed, and one more Rubbermaid horse trough. Before planting anything else I must kill the blackberries - the green things growing in or close to the wooden beds are wild blackberries and they are terribly invasive. I also need to dig 6" holes for the Rubbermaid troughs and settle them in. Then it'll be time to buy lots o potting soil to add to the compost. Then I can plant seedlings.
For the first time since his stroke Mr. Ken is interested in the garden - not in gardening, but in helping with the heavy work and helping to choose the plants and seeds. It's much more fun for me when he's interested.
Knitting: I'm continuing to plod along on the crushed raspberries Wonderful Wallaby and the Serape Noro Kureyon sweater. The pouch is next on the Wallaby, and I'm almost ready o separate the front and back n Serape. I started a pair of Monkey socks too. I've realized that one reason I start new projects is because the current ones are too big to carry around, or too complex to carry around, or a chart is required. That's my justification for having so many projects going at one time!