@djlew, I don't know if such a service exists in your area, but years ago we were able to hire someone to relocate a yellow jacket nest for us. It was under the entrance to our back yard shed where kids constantly took bikes and scooters in and out, and we didn't want to risk the stings. We'd already had a number of them. We found a service that relocated the nest to the outskirts of a nursery or farm or some such place that wanted them.
I've had some pretty painful experiences with all sorts of wasps. Earlier this summer I found by getting stung several times that I had paper wasps inside one of the bamboo poles edging the garden. I am not allergic to stings but am what doctors call "sensitive," and so I can have a whole variety of reactions in addition to the pain and swelling, and they can worsen the more I get stung. I did spray that nest in the pole. Thankfully it wasn't in the ground.
We currently have located three yellow jacket nests in the fields around here. They're currently marked, and kids have been warned to stay away from them. I'm not wanting early cold weather for the sake of the garden, but I am looking forward to cold weather taking care of those nests.
My cucumbers are on the way out. I may have used the last of the first planting, though I have a couple that may find the strength to develop before the vines completely die. I have a second planting that I started rather late, so they haven't blossomed yet. I am hoping for more cucumbers later in the season, though. Homegrown cucumbers are so tasty.
Earlier this week, I harvested some eggplant and made a lighter eggplant parmesan. It was a good way to use up more tomatoes, too.
I've been finding more worm damage on some of my fruits, so I picked a bunch of blushing fruits today to help preserve them. I'm particularly excited by the Beaver Dam peppers that I plan to let ripen to red, dehydrate, and grind into paprika.
I've stopped harvesting the red noodle beans as we have enough green beans to eat. I'm letting these mature and will eat some of the dry beans. They're in the same family as black-eyed peas, so I want to see how they compare.
The busy plants are called "Roselle," and they're a type of Hibiscus that's used for making tea. I grew them in Texas but haven't up here yet. I think they're daylight sensitive in terms of when they flower. I planted them late, but I'm not sure they'd bloom before September anyway. I am looking forward to seeing if they do bloom up here as they're really pretty, and I enjoy my hibiscus tea.
My sweet potatoes have been growing all over the place. I had to lift all the vines out of the path the other week, and they're now growing up through the cattle panel I put on them to contain them. That's working pretty well for this side. On the other side where the official trellis is, the path is gone, and they're starting to invade an okra bed on the other side of the path. I was quite delighted this afternoon when my son looked at the impassable walkways and said, "We need to make more of that spicy Hungarian mushroom soup and use the sweet potato leaves. That would help solve the problem and be tasty."
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