Good evening! 
Nira, enjoy your trip to Atlanta.  Seeing Jamie and exploring there with her and those grand pets all sounds good! 

Dan, thanks for checking in with your news!  Nice to hear all is well with you!  I laughed at your description of gardens becoming an extension of lawn.  I have a bit of that going on here.  Why is it, that grass struggles to grow where you want it and then flourishes where you don't want it?  I think has to do with better soil conditions. 

Pam, I have some of the indigo blue seeds saved, but better experiment if more than one of us does.  I agree that tomatoes like warm nights.  My best garden team member and I went out to the garden plots today. He picked red cherry tomatoes into a 20 oz plastic cup and only came up with less than half full.  I picked green beans from the rescue plot and some from ours.  He twisted off the huge chaklun squash and all that got donated.  I picked more sun gold cherry tomatoes.  First to ripen, last to give up!  I suggested we really should water.  He got going.  I went to water another plot that a guy had asked me to water at least once this week.  He is on a business trip.  The hose on that end of the garden plots had some issues.  I ended up soaking wet.  Oh well, oh bother!  My baby sister and I agree life is much easier if you don't get hung up on appearance too much.  Pam, the tomatoes are slowing down considerably in ripening.   We still have a lot of green ones out there.  My garden buddy was winding up the hoses when I asked if he had watered the plot we rescued?  Oh, no, thanks for reminding him.  I suppose I could have just done it but ... did I mention I was soaking wet?  He proudly said that our Romas were slow to ripen but look how many!  I think I have mentioned that I pick my times for learning carefully.  Those aren't Roma.  But they are plum tomatoes.  Those are San Marzano.  Both are plum tomatoes and ripen all at one time and I like our choice as they are spaced out.  Okay, so next time I will bore him with a discussion about determinate vs indeterminate tomatoes!  We didn't have much of a harvest to bring back in,  The garden is winding down.  I am not giving up yet, but soon.  And as we all do, look forward to next year!