We've had 2 lovely summer days which were cool enough at night for good sleeping, and not hot, humid nor windy during the day. It's been such a nice change from those crazy warm days. It's been so hot that some days, it was too warm to fuss with weeding the garden. While I normally water the garden beds mid afternoon, so the plants have time to dry properly to minimise the risk of powdery mildew, blight or other diseases, there was one evening I actually watered the garden beds because it had been so hot I didn't think the plants would survive the night without water. We've had a bit of rain in between, so mostly I haven't had to water a lot this summer.
Due to the blight issues last summer, I only planted a single tomato plant this year. I'll hunt around at the market or see if there are local farmers selling their extras when I want to put them up. Not my favourite way, but it gives the garden a break this year. So the single tomato plant I chose was a sweet 100, a cherry tomato type that I plant for both use in salads and for just eating out of hand when I'm working in the garden. While all the plants in that tray had little plant stakes declaring that they were all indeed Sweet 100, this one obviously was mislabelled. These are not cherry tomatoes! Nor do I have any idea what variety I might have here. It's fruiting already though, so that's nice.I planted more pepper plants than I usually do. There wasn't a lot of variety choice this year, unless I wanted to spend half a day hunting through different garden centres. The large one at the grocery store had minimal choices and they weren't looking all that happy. I usually just go to the feed store up the road and get whatever they have unless it's something special that I really want. So this year I planted Hungarian hot peppers, JalapeƱos and one plant without a tag, in a tray with several different varieties. I planted no sweet peppers because they are easy to find locally during the summer.
I have baby cucumbers too, from some old seed I found in a packet from a year or two ago. It's some fancy variety I think, but since I couldn't find any cucumber seeds at the shop, I thought that it was worth the trial. I had 4 seeds and 3 plants grew. I also did zucchini that way, from seed in a packet that I seemed to have ripped off the variety. I had 2 seeds and lucky me, I have two plants, one already flowering. I planted onion sets but they need weeding desperately but I've held off due to the number of mosquitoes in the cooler evenings.
I took apart my CSM (Circular Sock Machine) to clean it. It took several hours getting the cylinder clean due to yarn fuzz. Then I put it together wrong and had to put a call into my mentor to send her videos of what it was doing, which she diagnosed over the phone, told me how to fix it. It took me 5 minutes to fix, since I just put something in the right place, but the wrong location, if that makes sense. Anyway, everything on this machine, a Legare 400, needs to be set up at 6 o'clock to be in the correct location - crank hand, yarn carrier and making sure the ribber stop is also correctly places. So I'm going to see how it works by making my daughter hiking socks for her birthday. She liked the shorties I make for myself for the summer, but wants them just a little bit higher to fit in her hiking boots.