Archive for the 'Garden' Category

The Snakes of September

Kenya 2007

Arsim, Kenya 2007 (snakes in the tree)

This is a poem I ran across the other day, it reminded me of the time I spent in Kenya. The photo accompanying this poem is from that time in Kenya.

by Stanley Kunitz

All summer I heard them

rustling in the shrubbery,

outracing me from tier

to tier in my garden,

a whisper among the viburnums,

a signal flashed from the hedgerow,

a shadow pulsing

in the barberry thicket.

Now that the nights are chill

and the annuals spent,

I should have thought them gone,

in a torpor of blood

slipped to the nether world

before the sickle frost.

Not so. In the deceptive balm

of noon, as if defiant of the curse

that spoiled another garden,

these two appear on show

through a narrow slit

in the dense green brocade

of a north-country spruce,

dangling head-down, entwined

in a brazen love-knot.

I put out my hand and stroke

the fine, dry grit of their skins.

After all,

we are partners in this land,

co-signers of a covenant.

At my touch the wild

braid of creation

trembles.

Native Neighborhood

I sometimes try to Imagine if my neighborhood was decorated will native flora. A place where butterfly weed lured in the incects, trout lilly covered the ground and lawns covered in Kentucky bluegrass could only be seen in Kentucky. Thanks to Brandon Lingbeek and our awesome landlord Shahryar, we created a little bit of this dream.

Wild Bergamot (Monarda fistulosa)

Wild Bergamot (Monarda fistulosa)

Brandon and Shariar

Brandon planting the garden in July of 2008

June 2009, Ready for a summer of growth.

June 2009, Ready for a summer of growth.

Mountain Mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum)

Mountain Mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum)

Water Footprint

Some say water is going to be the next oil. Whether this is true or not we should all be careful how we use this precious resource.  Check out this graph that depicts some daily water usages. Beef, for instance, takes some 1500 gallons of water to produce one pound. Since we are interested in gardening we did not want our water consumption to be added to our footprint.  Agriculture is responsible for 87 % of freshwater consumption, by adding rain barrels this effectively eliminates the increased demand.

Plans for our rain barrel system

Plans for our rain barrel system

The barrels were free from a local agricultural supply company and the stands were a free find on Wealthy Street from an old antique store. The black flex pipe was found at Lowe’s for five dollars.

Rain Barrels Being Filled

Nick checking the barrels.

Nick checking the barrels.

How to build a garden.

Upon moving into our new house we decided to build a garden. The bennefits of having a garden in your back yard are many. Here are a few:

  • Freshness: Food available to cook as soon as you pick it. As soon as you pick food it begins to break down, some things lose half of their sugars within an hour.
  • Beauty: Plants are beautiful things.
  • Sustainability: The food you are eating is a hop skip and a jump away as opposed to the average 1500 miles most travels to get to your plate.
  • Relaxation: Being in a garden tending to the needs of the plants also tends to care for your personal health.
  • Variety: We love tomatoes, and you can only buy on or two kinds in the store. That is why we have 18 different varieties of tomatoes in our garden.
  • Waste: Eating food from your garden does not produce any packaging only compost that you can use the next year around.
  • Community: When you start growing your own food, you can share excess with your family or friends.
  • Price: The cost of gardening is very small if you avoid unnecessary things.

The first step in the process was to ask our landlord if he would allow us to plant some vegetables in the back yard. He agreed to our request and even helped out a bit.

The Groundbreaking Crew

Removing the Grass

Overview of the Plot