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    Home » Random Stuff

    What I Did This Week: Goodbye Maureen, a Garlic Barter, and the Cabbage Bikini Threat

    August 8, 2025 by Karen 49 Comments

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    This week was the kind where I played delicately with my delicate poodle in the house and smashed some antique china, and also harvested an 8 poundcabbage. Which I feel like is the full human experience.

    Karen Bertelsen in her garden with a just picked 8 pound cabbage.

    Let’s begin.


    Table of Contents

    • Maureen Died
    • Shattered: One Flow Blue Gravy Boat
    • The Garlic Barter Economy Is Thriving
    • 🥬 Harvesting, Bit by Bit
    • Flowers & the First Dahlias
    • 🦟 Bug Bites and Bad Ideas

    Maureen Died

    Maureen, my Venus Flytrap, died this week.

    She'd lived longer than most flytraps, had a good run, and ate more than her fair share of unsuspecting ants. She was moody, complicated, and liked her drinks distilled.

    A tiny dried up Venus Flytrap trap against a clay pot.

    She is very much dead.

    I’d say she died doing what she loved, but really she just slowly gave up over the course of a few weeks until one morning I walked outside and she was a tumbleweed. First she complained because she was too wet, then up and died from being dry.

    RIP Maureen. You were carnivorous, temperamental, and impossible. May you rest in my compost pile.


    Shattered: One Flow Blue Gravy Boat

    Philip and I were playing a very reserved game of chase inside, as one does when it’s August and you’ve hit your outdoor heat limit for the day.

    He made a sharp turn. I made a sharper one. The flow blue gravy boat did not survive.

    A shattered antique flow blue gravy boat sits on a marble countertop.

    It was a really beautiful one too.

    On the plus side, the wheat sheaf table it flew off of is still fine, along with a couple of candlesticks I'm quite fond of. Not as fond of as the gravy boat but that's the price I pay for inexplicably having a gravy boat in my living room.

    Not so inexplicable actually - it's where I held my peanut butter cups. All wrapped in gold foil no less. I'm very fancy when I'm not hand squishing bugs.


    The Garlic Barter Economy Is Thriving

    My neighbour came to pick up a piece of misdelivered mail. I left 6 heads of garlic on the porch for them to take too. I didn’t say anything—just quietly placed the garlic there like it was part of some underground vegetable exchange program.

    The next day, a jar of sauce appeared on my porch. Then a text. It was a jar of garlic gratitude.

    I added ground beef, boiled pasta shells, tore up some basil, and called it dinner.

    Pasta shells with meat sauce, mozzarella cheese, and fresh green basil leaves.

    Would you like to save this stuff?

    We'll email you this post, so you can refer to it later.

    Right. And cheese. I added a lot of cheese. I ate it four nights in a row, which is exactly the right number of nights for something that starts with “free sauce from a neighbour.”


    🥬 Harvesting, Bit by Bit

    The garden harvests are picking up. I've been forced to weed even more so I can actually see if there's watermelon in my watermelon patch.

    There are. Three of them. They aren't ready yet.

    This week:

    • 8 lbs of potatoes
    • One 8 lb cabbage (it's a flathead known as Gunma)
    • Zucchini that look like they were drawn from memory by someone who’s never seen one (They're growing all weird looking because the soil at my community garden is SO dry. Watering every other day no matter how deeply just isn't enough. The soil needs organic matter badly so it can hold more moisture. Sorry, I'll stop with the random gardening tips now.)
    • A few paste tomatoes that looked like they might be normal, but weren't (I'll reserve my tomato tips for this blossom end rot for another post)
    A small wicker basket with various freshly picked vegetables inside including dirt covered potatoes, onions, hot peppers and tomatoes with blossom end rot.

    I couldn't wait. I have to tell you a little bit now. I want you to know if that your tomatoes look like this, flat and black on the ends, you have blossom end rot. JUST CUT IT OFF. The rest of the tomato is perfectly fine to eat, don't think of them as a wasted tomato. They're only half of a wasted tomato.

    Part of the cabbage is going into winter cabbage soup this weekend, the rest into coleslaw. After that I’ll be left with just enough cabbage leaves to fashion a bikini for sun protection or slaw on the go. I haven’t decided yet.

    👉 My Classic Coleslaw Recipe


    Flowers & the First Dahlias

    The zinnias and dahlias are blooming.

    Miss Tegan, one of my semi-cactus dahlias, is just starting to fluff up. I paired her with some Floret zinnias for a small arrangement and stuck it in a dinosaur vase, because I’m an adult and I can.

    Miss Tegan dahlias with Floret Original zinnias in a Kikkerland plantosauraus vase.

    There’s a lot of flower arranging happening in my kitchen right now. There’s also an absence of available counter space and matching socks.


    🦟 Bug Bites and Bad Ideas

    I scratched my leg so hard this week it bruised.

    I think it was a chigger bite from the garden, but could’ve also been a mosquito with ADD. Either way, I’ve now reached the stage of summer where I consider keeping oven mitts on my hands just to get through the itching.

    A foot rests on a countertop showing the bruised calf and bug bites.

    Anyway—everything’s fine, and I’ve learned literally nothing from the experience.


    That’s it for this week. Next week I’ll try not to break any heirlooms or scratch myself into a new skin tone. I promised the sprinkler fix post this week but you didn't get that. I'm sorry. It will be ready soon.

    If you’re looking for me, I’ll be outside. Wearing cabbage. Making soup.

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    Reader Interactions

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    1. Kristin S.

      August 09, 2025 at 7:19 pm

      I'm a fan of benadryl anti-itch outdoor itch spray, which says it's for bites and poison ivy and such. I also always put a bandaid on top of it to mildly prevent scratching, but mostly to remind myself to stop scratching!

      If you get a mosquito bite in your hairline or neck, hydrocolloid patches for healing acne spots work well, just make sure it's plain hydrocolloid and not with an acid or medication for acne.

      Reply
    2. Teri on the left coast

      August 09, 2025 at 5:36 pm

      Sorry about the bugs hauling you off into the tree to have their way with you. Calamine lotion is a big mover in our house.
      By the way, I just made your coleslaw. I added purple onion and shredded apple (my mother sitting on my shoulder). Even without sitting in the fridge it is flat out delish! Thank you.
      Can’t find the cabbage soup however. Great cabbage year out here in the west coast.

      Reply
    3. Rich

      August 09, 2025 at 2:19 pm

      do you cook and eat squash flowers????? they are a real summer treat.

      Reply
      • Karen

        August 09, 2025 at 10:14 pm

        Only a couple of times. I'd like to but I'd also like to get as many squash as possible. :) ~ karen!

        Reply
    4. Maria

      August 09, 2025 at 1:28 pm

      Condolences on the demise of your flow blue gravy boat. It looks to have been lovely. Can it be glued? This is the kind of thing I would immediately be on eBay trying to find a replacement. So sad.

      Also, RIP Maureen you made a valiant effort.

      Reply
    5. ROBIN CARTER

      August 09, 2025 at 12:45 pm

      Here's a great tip for any kind of itchy bite. I've tried everything under the sun. The one thing that always works is... if it's on your leg or foot sit on the side of the bathtub and run the hot water on the bite as hot as you can stand it without burning yourself. Run it on the bite off and on as long as you can, it stops itching for hours! If it's on your hand or arm you can usually do it under the sink faucet. I swear it works!! I get terrible itching from chiggers and mosquitoes that's the only thing that really helps!

      Reply
    6. JC

      August 09, 2025 at 12:21 pm

      OMG Karen, your chigger bites and scratching look like mine. I ended up putting vicks salve on them before bed because that was the only thing I could find for relief from the itch.
      My skin is so pasty white that the bites shine and look awful.

      I didn't stake my tomatoes this year and I think it was a mistake....but I am picking what I can. Potatoes and onions should be ready this week, beets are coming along and my yellow squash are all blossoms and no fruit....but the acorn squash are coming along. You win some and you lose some.
      Sorry about your gravy boat it was lovely.
      Joyce

      Reply
      • Karen

        August 09, 2025 at 10:12 pm

        Thanks Joyce. I'm already planning a flea market trip to see if I can find a similar replacment. ~ karen!

        Reply
    7. Jan Siminiuk

      August 09, 2025 at 11:50 am

      I was very pleasantly surprised to find out that spraying solarcaine on the itchy bites stops the itch almost immediately. And also taking Benedryl orally. I think the bugs nowadays have been eating leftovers from a gmo meth lab or something.

      Reply
      • Karen

        August 09, 2025 at 10:10 pm

        We have meth leg? I actually think I have some Solarcaine so the next round of itching I'll give it a shot. ~ karen!

        Reply
    8. Librarian Nancy

      August 09, 2025 at 11:39 am

      My right leg looks like yours. I went to an outdoor concert in the park - very nice concert, bad mosquitoes. I recommend Benadryl spray. Sorry about your beautiful gravy boat. I was playing tug inside with Roddy the foster dog and the vase on the coffee table was a casualty. Oh well, I bought it at a garage sale about 20 years ago, so it had a good run.

      Reply
    9. Linda

      August 09, 2025 at 11:18 am

      My arm looks like your leg. Scratching feels so good!!!

      Reply
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    My name is Karen Bertelsen and I was a television host. In Canada. Which means in terms of notoriety and wealth, I was somewhere on par with the manager of a Sunset Tan in Wisconsin.

    I quit television to start a blog with the goal that I could make my living through blogging and never have to host a television show again. And it’s worked out. I’m making a living blogging. If you’re curious, this is how I do that.

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