Wednesday, July 08, 2009
"Knitting is very conducive to thought. It is nice to knit a while, put down the needles, write a while, then take up the sock again." --Dorothy Day
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Previous Posts
- Winner #7
- Evian Roller Babies
- Winner #6
- Bad News, Good News Prize No. 2
- Winner #5
- Winner #4
- When Knitting Mimics Writing --- Again
- Endless Summer Giveaway Instructions
- To inspire your Fourth of July knitting
- Winner #3
5 Comments:
The real question is: will any of those tomatoes turn red?
lol, i bought one of these on a whim back in april. My neighbor laughed and picked on me horribly, pulling his lip as if baited by a big fish hook... two weeks later his wife bought him one (and my mother in law did too) So we have been having a semi silent contest to see who gets the most, largest, etc plants and tomatoes. So far i am winning but nothing red yet!
Good luck with your tomatoes Barbara! Mine were cursed - the cats sat on top of the buckets and threw one to the ground, the other two were mauled to death by a possum with a horrible sense of humour. The vermin waited till I had two insey, winsey, teeney, weeney red fruit - then tore the plants from the buckets and shredded them. *sigh*
Congrats on the little tomatoes! I, too, have 4 topsy turvies, 3 of which have baby tomatoes on them (at least one, sometimes more), but the third--the red beefsteak tomato still hasn't even bloomed yet. Grumble grumble. But the toddler likes to go out and look at the "baby tomanoes."
lol...my neighbors think I'm crazy because I take pictures of yarn and fiber.
Hope your tomatoes all turn red. Mine are still green too.
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