Sunday, June 8, 2025

It's Hot, Humid, And Buggy. In Short- Florida In June


 That is a young Georgia Thumper. The grasshopper I've been writing about for a few months. They start out as tiny little black hoppers that cover plants and then they begin to grow and they grow some more and then some more and eventually, they are huge and yellow and red and look like this.


They can (and do, trust me) grow to be up to three or more inches long. The first time I saw one as a child I could not believe my eyes. What the HELL was this terrifying, unholy thing? 
And they can chew right through a garden. The only way to really get rid of them is to squish them but it's hard to smash something that big. I mean, not physically, just mentally. For me anyway. 
I've seen a lot of the young black ones on the beans and I have smashed a few but mostly I just leave them figuring there's enough there to share. 

It was so hot and humid here this morning that by the time I'd picked the garden, I was teetering on sweaty collapse. Any thoughts I may have had about digging more potatoes went right out the window. 
No way, no how. It did rain a little while after I came in and it is much more bearable outside but still too much for me. 

Glen spent most of the late morning and early afternoon in town, gathering supplies to take to Lake Seminole to get some work done on the cabin. Owen's going with him and they're leaving early tomorrow morning and will spend two nights. Two helpers are going to be there and I have no idea what the immediate projects are but I don't have to know. Glen did hint broadly that a pot of chili might be good to feed everyone for a few days but I redirected him by educating him on the merits of a good Stouffer's Family Sized Lasagna. I didn't even make cookies. I am getting so mean in my older years. He and Owen are going to go grocery shopping on the way up there. I hear there's a Walmart only eleven miles from the cabin. 
Sigh. 
Not sigh because of the distance but sigh because Walmart. They do sometimes have good produce. Or so I hear.

Yesterday, the day I did NOTHING, I decided that time was up on the fourteen-day pickles. Every day I was reboiling the syrup and adding another half cup of sugar and it was getting so ridiculous. Plus, I had not used alum in them and so they were looking like someone's biology experiment going very, very badly. Alum is a substance that I assume has aluminum in it that crisps those pickles right up. I mean, those pickles will snap to attention and salute after you add it. But I didn't have any and besides, it just seems like it's not a good thing to be ingesting but hell- with all that sugar, who cares? 
Anyway, I hadn't added it and so I figured I'd just jar those pickles up and process them but somewhere along the line I'd fucked up the pickle syrup (it's a long story and I'm not even sure how it happened) so I had to make a whole new brine with vinegar and sugar and spices. I used a recipe for bread and butter pickles and that's what went into the jars along with the pickles and I haven't tried any but they look okay. 


Just for fun I took a picture of the canned goods in the pantry.


Please do not think the entire pantry looks that orderly and tidy. It most definitely does not and one of the things on my should-be-done list is taking everything out of it, cleaning the shelves, and putting everything back in better order. 
But that part of it makes me feel like a good pioneer housewife, perhaps even a Mormon! and brings me pleasure. 

Tune in tomorrow when I may or may not dig up more potatoes! Oh, the drama! I am sure you are all hanging on to the edge of your seats! 

Until then...

Love...Ms. Moon


If screaming were a color, this would be it. 
Screaming for joy, of course. Or...whatever.


27 comments:

  1. You, mean? Nope.
    I live with a farmer and it seems to be a common expectation around here that I'm responsible for keeping him alive during seeding and harvest times.
    To that I say, huh? How do single farmers manage? I haven,t heard of any of them starving to death. My fella is perfectly capable of fending for himself. Who knew!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, but Kate- I am mean sometimes! Although I guess it depends on your definition of mean.
      For forty years I have done all of the cooking and Glen has pretty much done everything else. Well, not everything. Not even close to everything but a whole, whole lot. And that's been a fine deal for me because I do like to cook. For many years I've made him soups and casseroles and chili to take with him when he's going to be away for awhile, mostly doing some sort of work but suddenly- meh.
      Your comment about the single farmers reminds me of Garrison Keillor's bachelor farmers in his Lake Woebegon stories. I miss those.

      Delete
  2. I think these guys are very capable of catering for themselves. Sometimes men "include" women by commissioning food. Don't fall for it. I'm not entirely serious..

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No, you're right! I mean, this is not a damn barn-raising. There are so many choices of pre-prepared food these days and I believe Glen should avail himself of them.

      Delete
  3. That flower is delicious! The pantry looks great!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Now if only I could get inspired to straighten out and clean the rest of the pantry.

      Delete
  4. The men in my house can and do cook. I'm happy to share the cooking responsibility with anyone that wants to take over.
    The insects in FL seem super-charged and prolific. We have grasshoppers but I have yet to see one this year. Maybe the birds are eating them.
    Lately, my big contribution to meal prep is ordering from Kansas City Steaks. Consider placing an order and having it shipped to the log home. The guys will love the steaks, burgers and hotdogs.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I really do enjoy cooking so I'm glad to do it most of the time.
      I find that men are really good (or so they think) at grilling meat but then they think they've made dinner when someone else has prepared five different side dishes to go with the meat.

      Delete
  5. That pantry is a thing of beauty. I would have mixed the chili up in a crock pot so they could let it simmer on a counter, but cookies???!!! Too hot for baking, sounds like to me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wasn't in the mood, Debby. Not one bit.

      Delete
  6. With the beans already canned and more still growing, do you ever reach the point where you grab a jar of beans and it's the last one? I remember living with my mum for a while and there were seven other children at the time, three older ones had already left home, some were step-siblings, and mum would send a few weeks making jams and sauces and pickles and chutneys but would eventually have to buy some because we kids just ate it all.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nope. I have never run out of my beans. Not once. But I'm not feeding kids these days.
      I need to study some about chutneys. Thanks for reminding me.

      Delete
  7. That color IS screaming. Incredible. We had canning shelves in Connecticut that were our only neat and organized shelves relating to the kitchen. I loved admiring our work. Your humidity must be awful. Does your kitchen stay comfortable? We canned bread and butter pickles (which I had never heard of). Then there were the sweet pickles that SG decided weren’t green enough. He added food coloring. They looked like a nuclear experiment. I couldn’t eat them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The humidity is bad. 72% right now and I do believe it was worse a few hours ago between rain storms. The kitchen does stay comfortable for the most part but we do have AC. I also have a fan in the kitchen that I keep in a corner to turn on when I get to the point where I feel like I might scream. When I was a young hippie mama, we lived in a house that I loved very much but there was no air conditioning and I canned in those days too. I really have no idea how I did it. It must have been well over a hundred degrees in that steamy kitchen.
      You made me laugh with the story about the nuclear experiment. I don't know which would be worse- one of those or the bio lab experiment. I wouldn't have eaten a jello-colored pickle either.

      Delete
  8. Nature does give us some fabulous Colors. Your orderly Pantry Pix is a thing of Beauty too, with all the homemade Canned goods, you indeed look like a Pioneer Woman. The Man loves that Woman's Cooking Show, she is quite an overachiever, that one, I don't have that much ambition to achieve anything like that anymore, so he can Dream On. *LOL*

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Those TV shows where people are supposedly showing you the joys of simple living gripe me. We always forget there's an entire camera crew we can't see, stagers, experts in making food look good, and assistants too.

      Delete
  9. It's been miserably hot and humid here too with the feels like 10 degrees more than the actual temperature in the 90s.

    No chili? And no cookies? Harsh. The chili, OK. Too hot for chili anyway. You may be uninterested in knowing what the projects are but I'm dying to know.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I swear, Ellen, I cannot deal with the heat anymore. I am hoping that as I lose weight it will become easier but Glen's having a hard time working in it too. It "only" got up to 86 here today but my god, it felt like a sauna in hell.
      Yes. I was harsh. No chili, no cookies. Publix has everything though.
      I have a very bad feeling that what they're working on is the roof over the carport and I swear to god, that man told me he was going to hire other people to do things like that and here he is. Well, sure, he has hired one other guy and I'm sure Owen's getting paid but ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

      Delete
  10. That's a lot of food stocked up, Mary. It looks so organized!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know. I really should give the canning thing a rest.

      Delete
  11. I'm getting my gutters cleaned out today. How's that for exciting?
    I'm in the middle of selling my condo, have a very good offer, but need the condo documents, but of course when I go on the website and try to change the password, crickets. Sigh.

    And Gracie is mad at us again. Fuck. She couldn't even feed Jack yesterday because she left her bank card at home when she took him out. I'm angry today I think and feel like crying. Fuck.

    Sorry. Your pantry looks lovely and it's so satisfying when you look at it, knowing that you did that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Getting gutters cleaned is always exciting! I'd be excited if I had gutters to clean.
      Online shit makes me insane. Who the fuck is designing these sites? Why don't any of them know what they're doing?
      God, Gracie. And she's mad at YOU? That's messed up. I hope you had a good cry if you needed it.
      It is satisfying to look at that part of the pantry. It is one spot in my life that feels just plain good.
      I wish I could hug you.

      Delete
  12. Well, whatever mean stuff these grashoppers get up to, they do look spectacular!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It takes a lot of food to grow those grasshoppers from the tiny babies to the giant mature adults and they just love to get it in my garden. They are pretty impressive, aren't they?

      Delete
  13. My grandma was a dab hand at using secateurs in "halving" the population of grasshopper who used to taunt her. I have also heard of a chilli infused spray that they don't like on their feet that shouldn't affect the plants. V is no longer the backyard farmer that he once aspired to be, so the edibles that come from the back yard are sadly diminished.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh gosh. I'm not sure I could cut one of these guys in half. I mean- if we had to depend on the garden for all our vegetables, I could probably do it without a thought but as it is, we're sort of just sharing things. The chili spray may work but I'll never know. I don't have enough determination for that. If I had to spray every bit of my bean plants it would take me a year and besides that, the rain would just wash it away.

      Delete
  14. In Central Florida, we call those grasshoppers Lubbers. Only thing eats them is a Shrike - looks like a mockingbird that's become an NFL tackle. They taste bad, and he has to impale them and let them dry out a while before they're any good. Alum is a salt, potassium aluminum sulfate. It's usually safe, but not if you've got kidney issues. With your stones, avoiding it is a good idea.

    ReplyDelete

Tell me, sweeties. Tell me what you think.