DW & I have settled into a routine; getting up early, an hour or so working in the yard & home gardens... then off to the rural garden to weed. My previous estimate of that task was way low, there are 2-4 weeds per square inch in some areas.

There are 10-12 weeds within 1" of everything planted, and about 1000 square feet of purslane carpet. Honestly, if I didn't have so much old seed in need of renewal, I would just turn the whole thing over & plant cover crops for a couple years. The only ray of hope is that so far the sweet corn, gherkins, and soybeans are healthy in spite of the weed pressure.
DD showed up again today to help, she has really been pitching in a lot this year. Together we finished weeding 2 of the 7 pepper cages, finished weeding the bitter melon, and weeded two of the pole beans. I bought 2 stirrup hoes, which is the only reason we got that far. Weather permitting, those areas will be mulched tomorrow. The heat & humidity return again tomorrow - for at least another week - so our time in the garden will once again be limited. I'll be looking for a small rear-tine tiller to run between the rows, that might turn an insurmountable task into merely impossible.
At home, we planted a pear tree this morning. The Tromboncino has finally started getting male flowers (it started with all females) so I have begun hand pollinating, two so far. The eggplant in pots has started producing. We have begun harvesting chard & water spinach. The Emerite pole beans are covered with blossoms, so snap beans will be arriving soon.
Something else arrived a couple days ago - Japanese beetles. I put out 3 of the the same traps we used last year, and they are just as effective, catching hundreds. Only a few find their way into the gardens, mostly on soybeans & the Zebrina mallow that we allow to grow on the margins. That mallow is an outstanding JB trap crop.