Pulling weeds this afternoon in the
hot sunshine set my thinker in motion of past gardens. We have lived here for 50 years. It is easy to remember because I brought my
first child home to this house. Our first mortgaged home. She was born on May 29, 1963, so this makes a
golden anniversary for our being on the farm.
I have had
a garden of some sort most of those years.
I inherited some flowers when we bought the farm and tried to maintain
them. My mother-in-law helped me learn
the world of weeding. Which was a plant that
was desirable, which went on the discard pile.
She was an expert gardener. She
had a green thumb extraordinaire, no
matter what plants she worked with,
gardens or indoors, beautiful. Then she
gets a daughter-in-law with black thumbs.
No matter
the color of the thumb, I have always enjoyed the effort. I love being outside, digging around. I like
the feel of the dirt, the smell. I enjoy
the scent it gives when it is freshly watered. Love the way tomato plants
smell. When I was a kid we always had a
garden and in Wyoming
growing seasons are short. Short, but
still fun. My currant bushes, red and
black are throwbacks to my past, as is my love of rhubarb. Hardy plants, they had to be to survive from
year to year.
When we
built the house we now live in I had a garden plot just over the fence on the
west side of the house. For a few years
it did great, but I had a hard time keeping up with the weeding, etc., along with the house, chores, and 6
kids. After awhile I had trouble with my
root crops getting nematodes. I talked with the county extension agent to
figure out what was going on and had never heard of nematodes until then. Eventually even the radishes were full of
those black trails and I gave it up. Imagine some little mite wanting a radish! I was throwing away a bigger portion of
the produce than we were eating by the time I cut off the blackened spots and
lines.
I know I was still trying to maintain the
patch when I started working full-time at school. The fall harvest of garden, canning,
freezing, etc., plus being a beginning teacher, overwhelmed me. So I am guessing that garden spot served us
for about thirteen years. It was a choice between vegetable garden and sanity.
This week I
picked my first cherry tomatoes and a cucumber from my container garden. It felt nice and rewarding. At this stage of
my life containers suit our needs in the vegetable garden department. I have been trying it for several years now, experimenting
as I go along. We are empty nesters, retired, more or less. Retired me, very tired husband! Bob picked the
first two tomatoes from his favorite plants just a few days ago. He brought them
in as though they were trophies. Garden tomatoes are high on our list of
favorite foods.
Last week I gleaned two handfuls of
peas from the only 2 plants that grew---I had planted a whole package of
peas—Little Marvels, I believe, two containers worth. The two peas that grew did very well. I think after trying peas for the last two
years, they are not suited to my containers.
Remember this, brain, next spring!
The lettuce did very well, the spinach not so much. Green beans getting a good start. I planted a whole container of
nasturtiums---I have some leaves and plants, no flowers. I could eat the flowers, the leaves not so much. My parents often had nasturtiums in their
flowers. What am I not doing? The carrots
are doing well; I did two containers of them this year because last year I
wished I had more than one. We shall
see. At least I can keep up with the
weeding and give the bugs a good fight.
I do have some flowers this year,
but that is for another telling. There
is also an orchard with its ups and downs.
Do you like to garden, successfully or otherwise? Why?
I love the food from the garden, hate gardening, maybe because I am running like crazy with family. Also the weeds take over so very fast(morning glory and thistles) that it is a losing battle for me.
ReplyDeleteMy garden is a weed garden and it is doing amazing well! :P One day, things will calm down a little and I will get better. The cucumbers I planted died the next day. I guess my container wasn't a great one. Oh well.
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