• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • How to Garden
    • Garden Pests
    • Plant Diseases
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Seed Starting
    • Tools & Equipment
  • Plants
    • Plant Profiles
    • Vegetables
    • Fruit
    • Herbs
  • Recipes
    • Canning and Food Preservation
  • Books & Classes
    • Books by Jeanne Grunert
    • Books for Christian Herbalists
    • Herbalism Classes
  • About
    • Privacy Policy

Wonderful Summer

July 7, 2008 by Jeanne

It’s summer, glorious summer! We have been busy beyond belief. I guess everyone is, but this is our first summer on the farm (such that it is!) and our first summer owning our own home.

 

 

Fourth of July weekend was great. I shut down the company early on July 3rd, and although I did a ton of housework this weekend, we managed to find time for dinner with friends, watching old classic movies on TCM, and cooking John his favorite dinner – my special pot roast. We did skip the fireworks on July 3. John’s back was bothering him a lot, and I couldn’t see us sitting on the ground or on lawn chairs for a while. Luckily for us neighbors on Olive Branch Road had great fireworks which we could see from the second floor of the house.

 

 

We did so much work on the yard. I weeded another large section of the perennial garden, then remulched the entire second half. I am thrilled at how many flowers are blooming now! The photograph I’m posting to the blog is one of my pictures, taken after a thunderstorm, of a snapdragon I grew from seed. I have coreopsis, rudbeckia, cosmos, Bachelor’s Buttons, marigolds, snapdragons, zinnias and hollyhocks all coming up or blooming and all planted from seed.

 

 

I wish more people would plant flowers. I’ve always had this strong urge to encourage beauty wherever I go – in Manhattan, I would stop and enjoy the little alleyway gardens and I encouraged everyone to garden. Rooftops, fire escapes, alleyways…if there’s a patch of dirt, plant a flower. Why have things ugly? I’ve had some people say it’s too expensive, but the garden I planted here didn’t cost much. Truth be told, I bought packets of seeds at Dollar General for 10 cents each. Yes, you’re reading that right! Even the gladioulus bulbs I bought at Dollar General came out to around 10 cents a piece. I just scattered the seeds and watered them and now I have patches of beautiful flowers gracing the garden. Why won’t people take the time to do this? It is just so gorgeous…flowers lift the spirits…make the world a more beautiful place!

 

 

The ticks seemed to have died down now, but the Japanese beetles are eating everything in sight, including the apple trees, the morning glories, the hollyhocks and hibiscus. We have traps and sprays but all to no avail. The man at the Prince Eward County Cooperative Extension office was great about helping me with my questions about the orchard trees – he sent me so much information. Unfortunately, I’m too late to spray this year, but we are now armed with our to-do list for next spring.

 

 

My gratitude knows no bounds. New friends from church gave me a used keyboard, and I am back playing piano. I regret daily giving away my sheet music ten years ago, but I know that little girl who got my beautiful spinet piano and all that sheet music was so happy, she probably loved it and played it for a long time. I just wish I could remember the author of that sonatina I played all the time. I found the Beethoven sonatinas I played in high school online, and printed the music out, but haven’t found the one I played at my senior recital. I wish I could find it!

 

 

Thanks to all who submitted comments on my last post. To the lady who asked about Catholic model horse collectors, I don’t know of any such group. There’s a Christian model horse collector forum which is nice but not particular to Catholics.

 

Filed Under: Personal

Previous Post: « Cattitude and Gardening
Next Post: Civil War cannons and miniatures »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Christine

    July 9, 2008 at

    Me again ;). You would love the farms here. We have tons of Mennonites in the area and their gardens are so picture perfect it makes one cry. I wish I could be so prolific in keeping my farm so beautiful but I have to remind myself they have large families that help a lot and their own greenhouses etc.! I don’t have that. I did get a small Mary garden going, not what I wanted but for now it will do. I have a large cement Mary statue in front of my house that came with it. She is too heavy for me to move on my own so I made a ring of bricks around her and planted it. I told hubby I want her to have a place of honor in the future. He is Catholic too but not practicing, one of those forced to go to church by an overbearing mother who had a need to appear perfect. But he lets me do as I please with my quickly growning Catholic pile of stuff that I keep rescuing from yard sales and thrift shops ;). Maybe I’ll start a blog and show some of the stuff I have. Would you come visit?

    We just finished up a weeks worth of haying. 25 more acres to cut and bale and 1st crop will be done. Yay!

Footer

chive plants in bloom with lettuce

The 10 Easiest Herbs to Grow

Grow them in pots, containers, window boxes, raised beds, or tucked among your flowers. These are the 10 easiest herbs to grow in almost any temperate garden. They take up little space, are generally unfussy, and are used in lots of recipes. What Do I Need to Start an Herb Garden? You don’t need a…

Read More

a blue borage herb flower

How to Start Herb Seeds the Right Way: Free Course

Learn how to start herb seeds the right way with The Herbal Academy’s new, FREE online course! Home Garden Joy is an Herbal Academy affiliate. We love their ebooks and courses. I’ve taken many of them and found them to be very helpful. They get to the heart of herbalism without introducing spiritual aspects in…

Read More

raised bed garden

How to Prepare Raised Beds for Spring Planting

The snow and ice have finally melted. In the mornings when I walk my dog through our farm, I can hear a rooster crowing on a neighboring farm. Cardinals have begun singing in the dawn. It’s spring, folks. And while the calendar reminds me we can still feel winter’s icy breath, spring planting is just…

Read More

a shovel with compost on it

How to Start Composting in Winter

Have you thought about starting a compost pile, but you’re wondering how to start composting in winter? I mean, after all, here in Virginia we just had three solid weeks of absolutely tundra-like temperatures. I had a sheet of ice for a lawn, and the raised bed garden was completely covered in a thick layer…

Read More

  • About
  • Plant a Row for the Hungry
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2026 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme