I've just about gotten everything planted for the fall garden, with the exception of radishes, turnips, mustard greens and spinach. We're still getting pretty strong bug and worm pressure right now, so we'd like to get some cooler weather that may dissuade them from nightly all-you-can-eat buffets in the garden before we plant.
Speaking of all-you-can-eat buffets, I came back from work the other day to find one of our goats named Popcorn had jumped over a weakened part of the garden fence and that dude was in the garden eating. Fortunately, he only got to the sweet potato vines when I caught him. I was still some kind of angry with him. I had used landscape timbers as fence posts (bad decision) and they rotted. The goats took advantage of this and pushed the post down and it enabled Popcorn to get in the garden. Today I picked up 6 treated 8 foot 4x4s at the hardware store. Mending the garden fence is my next project. (Thank you, Popcorn.)
One thing that's really coming in strong right now is peppers. They are in abundance, healthy, and colorful. We bring baskets and baskets in and have started taking them to church to give away. They'll continue producing until the first frost kills them. The average first frost date for our area is November 10th. That means lots more peppers forthcoming.
The bright orange peppers below are called Datil peppers. They are HOT! We core these and put them on the dehydrator for drying. Once completely dry, we put them in a food processor and make pepper for seasoning. We learned you've got to be careful. We've added a little too much to dishes and you had to have a glass of water handy while you ate! The peppers on the right are Hot Banana Peppers. Unlike their cousins, sweet banana peppers, these will start a five alarm fire in your mouth. They look just like the sweet ones, too! We normally pickle most of the banana peppers - both sweet and hot.
The last photo is okra. The production of okra is certainly way down since the summer. We grow several varieties (Louisiana longhorn, Burgundy okra, Beck's Big okra, and Clemson spineless). We chop them up and cook down with onions and then freeze in quart freezer bags. We'll freeze a lot of this to use in winter gumbos. Once you have an inventory of all the garden harvest in the freezer, it makes cooking the meal that much easier and cuts out trips to the grocery store.
In a few weeks, I'll chop all the okra down and plant mustard greens, spinach, radishes and turnips between rows on the fallow ground between where the okra was planted.