The Fruits of My Labor

In varying stages of ripeness…

cherry.jpg

blackberries.jpg

grapes.jpg

thornless-raspberries.jpg

blueberries.jpg

vegetables.jpg

Share
This entry was posted in My Garden / Recipes. Bookmark the permalink.

12 Responses to The Fruits of My Labor

  1. mjd says:

    Thank you the recent visit and comment on my blog. Your fruits and the pictures of your fruits are beautiful.

    I have been looking around your site and links. Your dogs are very handsome; my parents had two Shetland sheep dogs. Your book looks quite interesting.

  2. Simply Jenn says:

    Yum! That fruit looks so delicious. The fruit we find in the grocery store isn’t usually very good since we’re not really known for fruit around here. Now I’m even more hungry for cherries and raspberries.

  3. Linda says:

    You’ve done something I’l like to try; Raised beds! What kind of cherry?

    I have to use raised beds because I have heavy clay soil. It’s great for our lawn which never ever burns out, but not great for my veggies. It’s a Lambert Cherry.

  4. teetotaled says:

    love the raspberry closeup…yum!

  5. threecollie says:

    It all looks just wonderful. Guess planting by the moon works from the looks of things.

  6. Joni says:

    YUM! I would love to have a little orchard like yours someday, everything looks so tasty and healthy. I love your garden set up too. Very cool.

  7. kailani says:

    It must be so rewarding to grow your own fruits. I wish I could do something like that but I know they wouldn’t last a week with me!

  8. Dori says:

    What a beautiful garden!!

  9. jan says:

    Most impressive. I always plan to have a raised garden, but it’s mostly winter dreams.

  10. Lovely…if I could only reach through and grab that raspberry!

  11. That’s some garden you’ve got there and must mean quite a lot of work. Hope the fruits of your labour are as good as they look!

    They are so very good. Makes it all worth it. :) 

  12. John Hunter says:

    do you know how I can keep some of my berries for myself? 2 years ago I had tons. Last year some birds would eat them all before they really got ripe :-(  Any suggestions for me?

    John Hunter’s last blog post..Pigs Instead of Pesticides

    John, the only deterrent I know of that works is the good old-fashioned bird netting.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

CommentLuv badge