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    The Farmer Diaries

    Texas farmer finds reasons to be cheerful despite dismal harvest

    Marshall Hinsley
    Marshall Hinsley
    Aug 23, 2015 | 6:00 am

    The end of August represents the end of the summer growing season, a time to tally up the successes and failures of my crops.

    In a normal year, I'd have my fill of squash, okra, tomatoes, potatoes, and onions. I'd not know what to do with all the garlic. The melons would be so numerous that I'd have gorged myself, sold them or thrown the overripe ones into the compost bin.

    Not this year.

    All squash other than a few my father sowed never made it to its productive stage. Okra was inedible except for a few pods here and there that weren't rock hard from the moment they formed.

    About two dozen tomato plants died in the field before setting fruit. Peppers that showed promise were scalded by the sun and unusable. Carrots became woody and tasteless when they were submerged for too long in floodwater.

    As to the potatoes and onions my father planted in February, he harvested about a third of what should have been ready by the beginning of summer.

    A few of the flowers my wife planted did come through, but most died. And a row of gourds she sowed in April had only one sprout, which withered away.

    I never got around to sowing cucumbers or cilantro. Sweet peas died in the mud, and neither my father nor I tried to sow pinto beans.

    Even the wildflowers had a bad year. After a springtime show of bluebonnets, the annual parade of colors was disrupted. Indian blanket, with its warm reds and yellows, never came. Lavender and white lemon mint were no-shows. Purple prairie verbena was spotted in a couple of mounds, not running the length of my driveway as it normally does. Evening primrose usually grows like a weed, but its soft pink petals were rare.

    You can't grow much when you're handed three months of nonstop rainfall in the spring followed by a summer with 41 days of no rain. Texas growers had no growing season to speak of, or at least one that came between two extremes of too much water and then not enough.

    For this to have happened in a year when grasshoppers and other plant-eating insects seemed to have been balanced out by their predators adds a sort of irony to the situation. If one thing doesn't affect your crops, another thing will, I guess.

    Perhaps the greatest justification for giving it all up and returning to the grocery store is the huge financial loss these failures incurred. I spent at least $500 on a melon crop in hopes of a $1,000 return that never materialized. What tomatoes and peppers I did harvest would probably have cost me about $70 to $100 per pound.

    That doesn't count the seeds that rotted in the ground; the nutrients for plants that never produced; and the value of my time, which I could have spent on more productive tasks.

    But I'm not giving up. I will press on and do this again because this year was a success; as in past years, I still harvested something, even if it wasn't what I had hoped for.

    I may have picked only about three dozen melons when I had planned on several hundred, but they're as sweet as ever. I've had no excess of tomatoes or peppers, but there's always one when I need it for a meal. The okra and squash has been scarce, but the few dinners when they did fill my plate were satisfying.

    A few raised garden beds of zinnias did make it, and they're blooming now. Sweet potatoes planted after the flooding receded show signs of producing a bumper crop in the next few weeks.

    That I've harvested anything at all in such extremely adverse conditions is proof to me that I can make things work, a little, even when everything that's outside of my control goes wrong. The weather can bring flooding and then drought, yet I can nurse along seedlings into productive plants, or sow seed again at less than optimal times and still get a little back.

    Anyone who gardens in Texas was thrown into the deep end this year, and to have made it through it all with anything to show for it was an accomplishment.

    This success or failure of this season had almost nothing to do with anyone's skill in growing fruits, vegetables, and flowers. The whacked-out climate was an overpowering force that couldn't be beaten.

    Sometimes things are totally beyond our ability to control or to remedy. We can't feel defeated. We just have to let go of it and hope for better things to come.

    Having had stellar years of gardening in the past, I know everything will likely be better again soon — maybe next year.

    Despite many setbacks, Marshall Hinsley's pepper plants produced a little reward by the end of the summer.

    Photo of square basket with a variety of sweet and hot peppers.
    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    Despite many setbacks, Marshall Hinsley's pepper plants produced a little reward by the end of the summer.
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    Supermarket News

    Kroger supermarket chain to open 3 new stores in Dallas area

    Teresa Gubbins
    Dec 8, 2025 | 10:31 am
    Kroger store exterior
    Courtesy of Kroger

    Kroger store exterior

    The Kroger Co. plans to open three new Kroger Marketplace format stores in North Texas. They're revealing two of the three locations with the third to be divulged at a later date.

    The two cities they're revealing are Fate and McKinney. According to a release, all three projects — including the mystery third location — will break ground in 2026. Further details on each location will be shared when the groundbreaking dates are announced. Why must they tease us so?

    “Kroger is working hard to keep pace with North Texas’ explosive population growth, ensuring communities have access to fresh, affordable groceries and essential items,” said Kroger’s Texas Division president Rudy DiPietro in a statement. “As new communities continue to emerge, these new stores will provide what the community has come to expect from Kroger – full shelves, where everything is fresh and our people are friendly.”

    Kroger has been on an opening spree: In October 2025, the company opened its newest Kroger Marketplace store in the Bonds Ranch area of Fort Worth at the northeast corner of Bonds Ranch Road and Highway 287.

    Three new Kroger Marketplace stores are currently under construction and expected to open in 2026 and early 2027 in Little Elm, Anna and the Sendera Ranch community of North Fort Worth.

    Kroger Marketplace format stores are multi-department stores offering full-service grocery, pharmacy and expanded general merchandise including outdoor living products, electronics, home goods, toys, and more. Marketplace stores typically range in size from 99,000 to 130,000 square feet.

    Kroger currently operates more than 100 stores in North Texas and East Texas and more than 210 stores throughout Texas. In 2022, Kroger opened a Fulfillment Center in Southern Dallas to focus solely on the growing demand for grocery delivery service. Over time, the company has expanded delivery options in North Texas with Instacart, Uber Eats and Door Dash to serve an ever-increasing digital audience and more remote communities without the need for brick-and-mortar stores.

    Kroger also offers customers additional Texas-sized savings and rewards on top of lower-than-low prices at Kroger.com or on the Kroger app, where there are more than $600 in digital coupons available every week.

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