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    The Farmer Diaries

    Rains bust drought but prove catastrophic to Texas farmer

    Marshall Hinsley
    May 17, 2015 | 6:00 am

    Growing crops through several dry spells in Texas has given me a superstitious fear that wanting the rain to stop will make it go away for good.

    We're wet now, but it comes after a four-year long drought with a record-breaking 71 consecutive days of temperatures above 100 degrees and no rain, one that caused a huge tree die-off and threatened crop production. Although rains came each year afterward, they were sparse.

    Finally this year, we've had enough precipitation to make up for years of deficits and replenish the moisture in the soil, like recharging some sort of water battery back to 100 percent. We need every drop of this year's constant rain.

    I feel almost ungrateful to admit that I'd like to see nonstop sunshine. But as I slog through muddy pathways after each rain and try to avoid ankle-deep floodwater on my way out to see if any of my melon crop has survived, I confess that I've had enough of rain and would like to see it end for a little while.

    Before the rains began two months ago, I planted a few tomatoes, two eggplants, one tomatillo, a raised garden bed of carrots and several rows of Israeli melons. My wife had sown seeds for several varieties of flowers and ornamental gourds; my father took care of the potatoes and onions. I had planned on having so much more in the field by now, but the muddy conditions made work impossible.

    Most of the flowers have drowned, even in the raised beds, as they were not built up high enough to stay above pools of water that have collected after each downpour. The carrots I harvest from last fall's sowing are rotten, and the ones I sowed in spring are not yet ready to pick.

    My melons have only grown an inch or two when they should have sprawled out by now into vines as long as six feet. Of hundreds of seeds sown to make a long row of ornamental gourds, only two seeds sprouted. The rest either rotted or were washed away when floodwater accumulated and then receded.

    I don't know the status of the onions and potatoes; they're too far into the mud and standing water to assess.

    I'm merely assessing, not complaining. I'll have gotten a late start on sowing this year's crops, but the region has risen out of its water woes, and that gives me a sense of relief.

    Drier weather is certain to come by June, and there will still be time to grow most everything because we are in Texas, a state with one of the longest growing seasons in the country. States like Minnesota may only have four good months of warm, frost-free weather; we have nearly nine, and the rains have used up only two and a half.

    Here's what's on my list to plant in the remaining six months:

    • Melons: Watermelons, Israeli melons, honeydews, and any other muskmelon or cantaloupe I want to plant still have plenty of time to be sown and to mature with sweet fruit long before the November first frost ends the growing season. Planted in June, varieties of melons with even the longest growing periods should be ready by September. Rocky Ford melons and Sugar Baby watermelons will be ready by the end of August.
    • Summer squash: If I sow yellow crookneck squash and zucchini by the first of June, I should be able to make my first harvest just 44 days later, around mid-July. In fact, successively planting squash throughout the summer is the better way than insecticides to deal with squash bugs, though nothing tops skunks.
    • Winter squash and pumpkins: Like melons, winter squash and pumpkins need months to grow, but as long as they're planted by mid-July, they'll have plenty of time to mature. For pumpkins to be ready by Halloween, though, a June sowing is recommended. Maybe this year, I will finally try out butternut squash, and maybe spaghetti squash, for a change.
    • Okra: Before the rains began this year, my wife was able to plant only a handful of okra, and it hasn't grown fast in such cool weather. As soon as it dries out, we'll plant rows of okra. Planted by the first week of June, it will still yield by the end of July and keep producing for several months.
    • Tomatoes: When temperatures at night stay above the mid-70s, pollination of tomato blooms becomes inefficient, which makes it seem like tomatoes stop producing in the summer. But by jostling the plants in the morning each day, they can indeed be made to produce. What's more, tomato plants intended for fall production are planted by midsummer, so there's ample opportunity to enjoy juicy, red, delicious tomatoes this year. To make up for lost time, I'll concentrate on varieties that produce small fruit, such as Texas Wild and Punta Banda tomatoes, plus a few red cherry types.
    • Peppers: I don't know why I even bother with planting peppers in early spring. It's heat that triggers their growth and fruit set, so planting them in a week or two when the soil dries a little is going to be good timing.
    • Carrots: To germinate, carrot seeds must be in contact with soil that's constantly moist. That's an easy condition to maintain with the soils as saturated as they are. I'll continue to plant carrots throughout June.
    • Cucumbers: I've planted no cucumbers outdoors so far this year, but as soon as the soil dries out some, I'll start successively sowing cucumber seed, starting a few vines every two weeks until September. Some varieties will be ready to eat just 55 days after the seed goes into the ground.
    • Eggplant: After setting out transplants, eggplants should start yielding in two and a half months. I expect fruits by September if not a little earlier in August, and then each plant will give me a weekly harvest until the first frost.
    • Herbs and flowers: Basil, cilantro, dill, parsley and just about every other herb can be sown almost about anytime during the growing season. There's also no reason not to sow zinnias, petunias, morning glories and whatever else needs warmth, as long as I keep the soil moist where they're planted.
    • Sweet Potatoes: May through June is the ideal time to plant sweet potatoes, so with this crop, I've not been delayed by the rainy weather at all.

    Marshall Hinsley's raised garden bed was inundated by continual rainfall.

      
    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    Marshall Hinsley's raised garden bed was inundated by continual rainfall.
    unspecified
    news/restaurants-bars

    Tex-Mex News

    Upscale Dallas Mexican restaurant Hugo's Invitados closes last outlet

    Teresa Gubbins
    May 19, 2025 | 4:33 pm
    Hugo's Invitados
    Photo courtesy of Hugo's Invitados
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    A highly-regarded Mexican restaurant has closed: Hugo's Invitados, which had been wowing crowds at its Las Colinas location 5240 N. O'Connor Blvd. #160 since 2018, closed in mid-May.

    According to spokesperson Matt Whiteley, the lockout came as a surprise. The restaurant issued a statement which said that "we find ourselves unexpectedly closed," before apologizing for the "incredible inconvenience."

    "We assure you, this was not our decision. We were in the midst of ongoing negotiations with property ownership, when the proprietors elected, without warning, to suddenly and fully terminate the terms of our lease," their statement said.

    Hugo's first opened as a partnership between entrepreneur Mark Hulme and restaurateur Hugo Miranda (Meso Maya), with an ambitious and well-executed menu of chef-driven Mexican food with dishes such as Wagyu carne asada, Mexican cioppino, and scallops with huitlacoche & corn couli. Margaritas were made with organic ingredients, and everything on the menu was gluten-free.

    They went on to open a Tex-Mex spinoff Hugo's Lost Colony in 2021, followed by the debut of a fresh taqueria called Honest Taco in Dallas' West Village in 2022. (They also had plans to open a second Hugo's in Uptown Dallas in the McKinney & Olive luxury tower but that plan got scuttled; they went on to open a Hugo's in the West Village in 2023.)

    Their momentum got derailed due to a string of unfortunate circumstances — including Miranda contracting COVID in 2020, as well as a change at the West Village, where restaurateur Mike Karns took over as majority owner and promptly installed his own concepts in the Honest Taco space: first Mexican Test Kitchen, a pop-up, which he replaced with UnaVida, now reportedly closed.

    But the original Hugo's at Las Colinas still had a loyal and consistent following, and had also become a destination for gluten-free diners, Whiteley says.

    "That location was still doing very well," he says. "We had regulars from the neighborhood as well as customers who came from outside the area, and we also had the same staff who were with us from day one, who cared deeply and who get all the credit for the quality and service."

    They hadn't lagged significantly on rent and were anticipating a brisk Mother's Day weekend with full reservations; alas, the new-ish landlord, a company called Water Street O'Connor LP, abruptly locked the space the Thursday before.

    "It would have been a special weekend for our customers as well as for our 70-plus employees, whose livelihoods depended on this small business," Whiteley says.

    It's an unfortunate ending for a restaurant that could have been a run-of-the-mill Tex-Mex but was instead something much better, and Whiteley says that, at this point, as much as they'd like to revive it, the likelihood that it will resurface is slim.

    tex-mexclosings
    news/restaurants-bars

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