When we decided we wanted to move to Wisconsin last year, but long before we had the means to do so, I booked a camping reservation at Devil’s Lake State Park for the end of May, 2023–10 months in the future. Classic case of manifesting. Act like you’re already living there and the Universe can’t help but acknowledge that. Obviously it worked, because a few months later, I got the TobacCo job offer.

Only we never actually went camping. When the end of May rolled around, I cancelled the reservation. We just had too much going on: we’d only been in the house a couple of months and were still unpacking and organizing, my parents were coming out for a visit, there were new cats demanding our company, yadda yadda.

To make up for that, I booked a spot at a different state park closer to home for August 18-20. We average two camping trips most years but hadn’t been since 2021, seeing as how we were kinda busy manifesting, and then actually moving, last year. Suffice it to say, we were pretty excited.

And then Friday night happened.

We were sitting out on our deck after dark, kicking back, watching the fireflies, enjoying the calm before the storm. The day had dawned with one of those foreboding red skies that indicates bad weather ahead.

It was super warm and humid. I was sitting there, sweating in the dark, doused in OFF! to keep the mosquitoes at bay, and started thinking about how uncomfortable our camping trip was likely to be. Sitting around a campfire roasting s’mores is no fun when it’s 78º and muggy. Add in the biting bugs, and suddenly, home sweet home sounded a lot more appealing. So, I cancelled the reservation and rebooked the same site for next May. Hopefully, third time’s a charm!

At least then the corn won’t be sweating.

The first time Tara told me about corn sweat, I thought she was pulling my leg.

“Corn pops when it gets hot,” I said. “It doesn’t sweat!” But much to my a-maizement, there was a kernel of truth to Tara’s words.

Corn sweat, or evapotranspiraton if you want to get scientific, is a Midwest phenomenon that occurs when corn and soybean crops draw moisture from the ground through their roots into their leaves, stems, and fruits. The water evaporates into the surrounding air, causing humidity that rivals the deep South. One acre of corn can release 4,000 gallons of water per day, making the heat index skyrocket. Corn sweat peaks when the stalks reach their “tasseling” phase 80-90 days after planting, from mid-July to August.

I’ve joked that I should become a science teacher because of all these interesting knowledge drops I’ve been providing y’all. You’re welcome.

By the way, sure enough, a round of strong thunderstorms rolled through later Friday night. Thankfully not as destructive as the ones that hit Fort Atkinson two weeks earlier.


Yesterday, looking for something fun to do that would get us out of the house for a few hours, we decided to drive to Lake Geneva. There was a record store I wanted to check out, and Tara suggested a stop at Northwind Perennial Farm in neighboring Burlington. I don’t get excited over plants and flowers the way that my dear wife does, but I have to admit, strolling the grounds is a real treat. The landscaping is beautiful, with little pops of color everywhere, and a few surprises tucked away that you might walk right by if you aren’t paying attention.

After killing an hour there, we drove the 10 minutes to Lake Geneva, where we ran into the usual thick crowds. Lake Geneva is basically a tourist hub for FIBs…err, Illinois residents…who like to escape the Chicago madness, I guess? We hit Black Circle Records, enjoyed a giant pretzel and beers from Topsy Turvy Brewery, and walked down to the lake.

Hard to believe the last time we were there, we walked on it.

What a difference six months makes.


47 responses to “Corn pops and sweats.”

  1. Every time our kid demands to camping, my husband gives him a reproving look and says, “Son. We’re hotel people.”

    Liked by 4 people

      1. Where’s your sense of adventure?

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I’m open to almost all adventures in any environment that is void of bugs. 🤪

        Liked by 1 person

      3. No adventure is completely void of bugs. I was pulling out of my driveway on the way to work a few weeks ago, windows rolled up, when I spotted a big ol’ hornet on the driver’s side window. I am not ashamed to admit that I screamed.

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Haha! But don’t you want D to experience roughing it in the Great Outdoors?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Better, actually, because you can sleep in a bed afterwards.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I. It’s twisty, spiraling way it turned out to be the perfect place and thing to do

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Cool outhouse with the creepy little men. 😂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I kinda want to replicate that in our backyard!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yes I’m sure you do. 😀

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Good call on the camping!
    Too hot for s’mores is too hot for camping.

    Also, see if you can guess which Lake Pic appeals to me more.
    Hint: it’s not the Frozen Tundra shot.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I like your “too hot for s’mores is too hot for camping” rule. Seems like a good gauge to use when deciding whether to go camping or not.

      See, I much prefer the frozen lake!

      Like

  5. It’s hard to imagine that a big body of water like that actually freezes over to the point it can be walked on. Although pretty, pictures like that make me happy to live where it doesn’t snow. Good luck on your camping plans for next May. Camping in the heat and among mosquitoes would be a hard pass for me.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. It amazes me just how quickly those big bodies of water can freeze, too. Makes me long for winter in the biggest way possible!

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  6. Wow!! Look at that! From frozen over to swimmable!! But I shudder at the words “Lake Geneva” because it brings back bad memories of my former job when I had to book my bosses travel to an annual conference on the lake. Just trying to get an answer out of him about whether or not he was going to need transportation from the hotel to the dock for the boat ride was enough to make me tear my hair out.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I can see how that might give a person a little PTSD.

      What’s weird to me is that the name of the town is Lake Geneva, but the name of the lake is Geneva Lake!

      Liked by 1 person

  7. That is wild–how extreme the weather can be and the changes it can make in the landscape. The last time we went camping a few weeks ago, we weren’t allowed to have campfires and were in an area of Washington that tends to be colder (Olympic Peninsula) I was thankful that I’d packed sweatshirts. However, there isn’t much you can do to get away from the heat and humidity OR bugs. Yuck.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. One time we went camping up by Leavenworth in July amidst a drought. They enacted a campfire ban the day after we left. I would’ve called off the whole trip if I couldn’t have a campfire; that’s the best part!

      Like

  8. That pink sky photo is stunning. Sorry the camping didn’t work out, but then I don’t camp unless it’s in a 3 bedroom condo so what do I know?
    Btw… I totally want that chain saw fish.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I knew you weren’t the camping type. How ’bout your husband?

      The chainsaw fish is pretty badass!

      Like

      1. Husband can rough it with the best of them, he’s a Marine after all…. but the man does love his television. We’ve been married 39 years and haven’t camped once. Enough said.

        Like

  9. I love a good garden store/farm. The outhouse is . . . interesting? LOL! Good call on the camping but I suppose it will be cold in May?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The reservation is May 31-June 2, so hopefully the weather will be perfect then. I looked at the weather this year and we had lows in the upper 50s, highs around 90. Which was actually unusually hot; I think the average that time of year is 75 or so. Shouldn’t be any humidity either.

      Like

  10. Ooh, that perennial farm looks beautiful. Even Lake Geneva looks inviting despite all the people. Smart idea cancelling camping. I’m not sure if you saw the post, but the husband and I (and Diana from Handstands Around the World – not sure if you guys “know” each other) got eaten alive up north last month. I do not recommend!
    Ah, corn. So many plusses and minuses associated with that crop. On the one hand, I had the most exquisite piece of corn last week. On the other hand, sweating and contributing to humidity. Thanks, corn. Speaking of humidity, it was hot on the latter half of our recent trip in Europe, but it wasn’t until we got home that we experienced humidity. Again, thanks, corn.
    Interesting contrast of the lake in two seasons, but I’ll thank you to not show me icy winter pictures in summer. Too soon! 😉

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, Diana and I follow each other, and I read both your posts about your meetup. I think the mosquitoes would have put a real downer on the trip anyway, and now they’re predicting 90s for the weekend anyway. I have no idea if it’s going to be humid too, but either way, zero regrets about cancelling.

      Also: I’m so ready for winter!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. My first thought is: crazy.
        But my second thought is: good for you… too many people live in these parts and all they do is complain about winter but they never leave – they must love to complain.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Midwest winters were a big draw for me!

        Liked by 1 person

  11. Great pics!! Hopefully you’ll go camping next year!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. My feeling is that, come hell or high water, we’re doing it next year!

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Corn sweats?? Is that anything like the meat sweats?? Probably not.

    Lake Geneva is much nicer after Labor Day, when the dreaded FIBS leave town.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I laughed out loud over your “the dreaded FIBS” line. ‘Cuz, you know. (But you are absolutely not one, regardless of where you live!).

      Liked by 1 person

  13. When I’m in Lake Geneva, the FIBS annoy me as well. They are EVERYWHERE. 

    Liked by 1 person

  14. Growing up in the midwest, I knew about the corn sweats situation. I also know that there’s a difference between roasting ears [corn on the cob] corn and pig [animal feed] corn. The first is for human consumption, the latter is for… well, pigs. In a field I cannot tell the difference between the two, but my mom could.

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  15. The red, bad-weather-premonition sky is amazing. I think you were smart to rebook your camping trip to a time with a more ‘spring like’ weather chance.

    Reading your blog always reminds me of what a small world we live in; another blogger I read is in Fort Atkinson and was writing about that terrible storm a few weeks ago. Another told me this morning she was going to Lake Geneva for the weekend with her kids.

    Corn sweats. Are you sure that isn’t what it feels like trying to ‘get off corn’?

    Like

  16. “But much to my a-maizement, there was a kernel of truth to Tara’s words.”- This sentence is awesome 😂
    I didn’t know about corn sweat- I wonder if we have that here in Lancaster PA too. We plant a ton of corn and soybeans and the humidity/dew point here is often sky high.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I wouldn’t be surprised if corn sweat affects your weather, too!

      Liked by 1 person

  17. […] blaming the heat and humidity on a “death ridge” (how ominous!) All I know is, the corn must be sweating […]

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  18. […] hike aside, the festival itself was very impressive, and about five times bigger than the Midwest Sweet Corn Festival. Even the food vendors were a notch above typical festival fare; in addition to the usual corn dogs […]

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  19. […] it feels like August. The only saving grace? No unbearable humidity like we had back when the corn was sweating. Luckily, that’s all about to […]

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  20. […] it feels like August. The only saving grace? No unbearable humidity like we had back when the corn was sweating. Luckily, that’s all about to […]

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  21. […] weather was pretty decent this time around. Sunshine, big fluffy clouds, no corn sweat. It’s actually been borderline chilly the past few days. Pleasant enough to sit out on the […]

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