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Happy is the gardener who gets her plants in the ground and her tools put away before the rain starts.

I couldn't help myself. I jumped the gun this weekend. The broccoli I planted will be fine when the temperatures drop below freezing later this week. It won't bother the pansies either, though the hollyhocks are already trembling. The lettuce and peas I sowed are hardy enough to push through snow.

But I fear for the tomatoes. I put them out several weeks too early in a fit of blind optimism and while hallucinating about fresh tomato, basil, and mozzarella sandwiches. Maybe I could build them little bonfires or quick knit them all a blanket. Stay tuned....

Besides gardening (in a cloud of punkies so thick I had to work with a shawl wrapped around my head), the other fun thing this weekend was our nine-mile run around Cazenovia Lake with our Team in Training teammates. I've reached my fund raising goal and my Beloved Husband is 80% of the way there -- he only needs another $485. Our bribery offer of free books and other goodies still stands if you donate (scroll down the linked post for the details.)

Several important dates are sprinting towards us:
48 days until the Lake Placid Half-Marathon
60 days until ALA
146 days until the Philadelphia Distance Run
176 days until the release of CHAINS and my book tour (I got a preview of the tour plans last week, but I can't talk about it until the details are finalized.)

Looking backwards now:
2008 Resolution Tracker
Week 16 - Miles Run: 14.5, YTD: 329.25 (gone through another pair of sneakers!)
Week 16 - Days Written: 7, YTD: 118

This is Day 119 of 2008. We're just about one-third of the way through the year. Does that seems possible?

Comments

[info]m_stiefvater wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 02:20 pm (UTC)
This sounds like my sister! She went wild planting things last week -- of course, in Virginia, it's less of a gamble -- and when you mentioned basil, mozzarella, and tomato sandwiches, it made me want to get out there and help her plant some more.
[info]janni wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 02:44 pm (UTC)
(gone through another pair of sneakers)

I had no idea how quickly those things wear out before I started running ...
[info]halseanderson wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 02:51 pm (UTC)
I know, right? I have a spot on my knee that always gets painful just as I approach the magic mileage number when the sneakers expire. It is irritating and expensive to have to keep replacing them, but my husband reminds me it's cheaper than surgery.
[info]janni wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 02:57 pm (UTC)
Shins for me. I spent miles and miles telling myself surely not yet, as if shin pain was somehow worth putting off the expense a couple extra weeks.

I remind myself it's still cheaper than any number of other ways of keeping moving ...
[info]wordsrmylife wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 04:27 pm (UTC)
Tomato help
Did you ever try "Walls o' Water" for your tomatoes? They're a ring of plastic sleeves you fill with water and put around your tomatoes and peppers. The water acts as an insulator. I used to use them and they worked. Now I am so far behind in my garden most years that the tomatoes go in on Memorial Day, no matter what.

Kathy Q.
[info]pameladean wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 05:36 pm (UTC)
Re: Tomato help
Wall-o-Waters are even cooler than that. Water releases heat as it freezes, so if the temperature REALLY drops, the colder the water gets, the warmer your little tomatoes are.

P.
[info]wordsrmylife wrote:
Apr. 29th, 2008 02:07 am (UTC)
Re: Tomato help
Right you are. Although I never put the W-o-W out early enough to see them actually freeze. They certainly are handy for those of us who live in what my Mom calls the Intemperate Zone.
[info]pameladean wrote:
Apr. 29th, 2008 02:45 am (UTC)
Re: Tomato help
Hee. That's a great name for it.

I live in Minnesota, and we can have frost into May. Sensible people don't plant tomatoes until Memorial Day, and then there are the rest of us.

P.
[info]halseanderson wrote:
Apr. 29th, 2008 12:31 pm (UTC)
Re: Tomato help
I have rarely been accused of being sensible.
(Anonymous) wrote:
Apr. 28th, 2008 06:35 pm (UTC)
Too funny that you should mention punkies, I was trying to explain those horrible little buggers to a non native Central New Yorker the other day and they looked at me like I was nuts. I have always called them punkies too! I guess that goes along with conies, spiedies and salt potatoes.


[info]wordsrmylife wrote:
Apr. 29th, 2008 02:08 am (UTC)
Yeah, I had to look them up. Round these here parts (northern New England) we call 'em no-see-'ems. Lucky for us, they aren't out yet. Soon enough.
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Laurie Halse Anderson
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