Perhaps the culprit
Whiskeyjack poses
Bluejay's turn for a portrait.
Self portrait with garlic
Picnic at Tinker's Point
The carrot harvest begins
About a minute and a half of the south-facing sky…
Something from the cushion fell
Tuna's jumpin' and the gull is amused
Dickcissel a long way from home
Late but still good, maybe better for being late
Raising the bar
Where they take the peanuts we give them
Leaf
Linaria still blooming
At Luke's Brook
One of the pleasant things about dark, wet weather…
Some kind of crow gift
Not quite right
Jupiter's back around
Jupiter from the back door
Crow
Moony sky
Me -- ha! -- by the road in 1972
Orralt's new song
The ISS passing by
The C on stage
Selfies with "Sr Barbie" fans
"Repairman Pope"
The Pope's training
I didn't take the picture. No one took the picture…
AI Lunchroom
Memory of Stone's Cove
Sophisticated plagiarism
Harbour Mille
Escape hatch
Milbert comes to visit
Garlicbragging
Black-and-white
The Dirty Oar
About to turn into Bay L'Argent
Window
Next door
Bouffant Blue
Waiting for the warm weather
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Ain't no farmer


This morning, the first day of our (northern) autumn, I dug up my remaining garlics. I had had a few dozen planted in three little plots and this plot was the least accessible. So it waited till now. I probably should have dug them up a month ago, but they weren't much ill-served by waiting the extra time. Maybe not at all.
I had no string so I used hops vines to tie them together and I stuck some old leftover clothesline through the vines to hang them from the rafters in the shed. I will cook with some in a couple of hours.
This batch comprised fifty garlics of three varieties. I had already dug up eighty-some garlics in the other plots. So I have about 130 garlics hung up drying. I will put some of them back in the ground for next year — probably mostly this variety, “Rocambole.” Rocambole is a very bright-tasting garlic though it produces many small cloves in each head, a hassle when you are cooking. But it is the most delicious garlic I have grown.
I had no string so I used hops vines to tie them together and I stuck some old leftover clothesline through the vines to hang them from the rafters in the shed. I will cook with some in a couple of hours.
This batch comprised fifty garlics of three varieties. I had already dug up eighty-some garlics in the other plots. So I have about 130 garlics hung up drying. I will put some of them back in the ground for next year — probably mostly this variety, “Rocambole.” Rocambole is a very bright-tasting garlic though it produces many small cloves in each head, a hassle when you are cooking. But it is the most delicious garlic I have grown.
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