Final harvest

It’s been years since I’ve grown anything I thought of as a “crop.” Robert’s and my history does include several years of heavy-duty gardening, including a few years of bountiful harvests in the Farmington River valley of Connecticut. What I just pulled in from the back yard is nothing like the 50+ pounds of tomatoes from the year I was pregnant with Allison – but it’s a step nonetheless.
When we moved to D.C. we tried to grow vegetables in our back yard. The big oak tree next door cast too much shade in our yard, though, and the year of the squash vine borers was our last. I can’t even begin to think how long ago that was…
But since the big branch fell off the tree, I’ve been watching to see if I thought there was enough sun, and eventually I started with some herbs. Now that I’m “really retired” I thought I might try again.
All I grew this year, other than herbs, was yellow pear tomatoes. I put two little plants out in early June, and when we went on our July vacation they decided to go on a growth spurt. That was the time I would have tamed the plants, suckering the vines and tying the remaining shoots or caging the plants. Since I wasn’t there to tend them, the plants had their own way to grow and became quite unruly. I just let them do their thing because it didn’t look as though they were going to be worth the effort. Even into August there were plenty of flowers and some green tomatoes but not a great crop. Then, just before we left to go West, they started to ripen. When we returned from Wyoming they were covered with ripe, delicious yellow tomatoes – and they have continued to give us enough fruit that I haven’t had to supplement with store-bought tomatoes (unlessI had a special recipe that required them to be peeled. Guacamole comes to mind …)
The weather guessers say it’s going to frost tonight. It probably won’t, but nonetheless … I stripped my plants today. I also remembered that I had planted basil, which remained almost completely covered by tomato vines until I pulled those stalks today as well.

The pesto recipe is easy – I’ve continued to grow a few herbs through the years and frozen pesto when the basil harvest was big enough. I’ll have to go searching for a green tomato relish, though. I’m looking forward to having a kitchen adventure!
Next year the “vegetable garden” will be different. I grew a lot of herbs for the first time this year, and I think that’s a better use of that patch of ground. The yellow pear tomatoes will be in big pots on the patio so I can move them into the sun as it travels from north to south during the growing season. We have loved cooking with fresh sage, rosemary, thyme, and oregano. We’ll consider what else to include when spring comes.

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A new client!

I haven’t exactly declared that Hazel Becker Editing & Publishing Services is open for business again. However, I have agreed to do a project for a neighbor and she has agreed to pay me for doing it.
I’m not sure what this means! I love being retired, and I really don’t want to change that. I’ve had no problem filling up my time with volunteer work-like things (like maintaining Kehila Chadasha’s website, which by itself could be a half-time job if I would let it!) and reading. I still work out, one way or another, every weekday and try to do active things on the weekend.
But when a neighbor whom I did not know put a notice on the Chevy Chase Listserv looking for someone to help her scan some family photos and arrange them into a book along with text she will provide, I answered and gave her a low-ball price. We’ve met twice, and I have just delivered a contract for her to sign.
I will learn some new publishing skills. I haven’t produced my own files to send to a publisher in more than 10 years, and the whole printing/publishing scene is different now. I hope I won’t have to invest all my earnings from this project in new software that I may not use very much – though I certainly would enjoy learning to use the software. But my first and primary learning task will be to find out what resources are available for having color photo books printed and what kind of files are needed. I’ve done investigations like this for my entire professional career, and I always enjoy the process.
I might even enjoy that part of the project, and learning new software, more than actually doing the work. I’m not a natural designer (ask my sisters!). But I’ve been producing publication layouts and touching up photographs for a long time. I’ll muddle through and hope I can muster up enough visual creativity to please the client.
I’m not spending a lot of time pondering the bigger meaning of agreeing to go “back to work,” even on this limited basis. For the moment, I’ll just take it as a good sign for my mental and emotional health.
This first project will give me the opportunity to see if I can work again without letting it add any stress to my retirement. That’s the goal. Wish me luck!