Posts to Raccupine Farms reflect "Life in our Shoes". For me it means practicing Yoga and Nia, helping my husband, Nathan, in our organic vegetable garden, getting enough sleep, and re-embracing a “so cool” relationship with my husband. Life..is..SO..good! Turns out, this blog is a love story of sorts, for healthy living, nurturing relationships, and building community.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Saturday, August 14, 2010
The Abundance of Avocados
Have I mentioned that our 30-foot avocado tree has yielded at least 30 avocados so far this summer? All have been a little over a pound and, when they ripen, their nuttiness is a taste of heaven and they spread like butter. Nathan planted this treasure from one avocado pit in a pot when he came to live here. We have waited about eleven years for this tree to bear this much fruit.
Labels:
Avocado,
California Avocado Commission,
Cooking,
Fruit,
Fruit and Vegetable,
Home
Volunteers for the Harvest
Lucky us! We have volunteers that show up from time to time in our garden. But ours don't sign in when they arrive; they just pop up out of the ground. Last winter's frost put a dent in their production but a few have managed to linger and recover. So we have spurts here and there of last winter's crop mixed in with this summer's bounty.
Yesterday, I gathered some winter friends
Yesterday, I gathered some winter friends
Labels:
Avocado,
Bell pepper,
Butternut squash,
Eggplant,
Garden,
Growing season,
Heirloom tomato
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Dirt, Composting, and Love
Then... |
When Nathan first came to live in this house, he wanted to buy a yard of dirt to use for landscaping the “football field” (aka the backyard). I remember putting up such a stink over it. The truth was that I had been “left” before in this house AND--to add insult to injury to embarrassment--I got left with a huge mess to clean up.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Eating what’s “hot” when it’s hot!
In Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal Vegetable Miracle she urges us to digress to a time-- before trucks burned fossil fuel ad nauseam to transport fresh vegetables coast to coast--when we had no choice but to eat what was grown locally. Where I grew up--in Maine in the 50’s and well into the 70’s--there only was local produce. Kingsolver’s wonder-filled book encourages us to buy local produce and be creative in eating it every way imaginable until that crop runs out and the next abundant vegetable crops up to challenge us to do it all over again. Animal Vegetable Miracle is a veritable gold mine of Kingsolver’s family’s experiences doing just that and it even contains recipes we all can use.
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