Thursday, June 30, 2011

Thursday Squash

A Red Kuri Squash in the Garden
This is my first year growing winter squash, and rather than the traditional butternut, a Red Kuri is what I chose to try out.  Apparently they are like small red pumpkins, or sometimes they stay yellow, with a very tasty nutty flavor.  Trying oddball things like this is one of the aspects of home gardening that really appeals to me: I'm not limited to what the markets choose to sell.

Another excellent example of that is garlic.  There are two kinds of garlic in the brand-name stores here, and maybe another five more at the farmer's market, but this year I planted four totally oddball varieties in my  search for the perfect garlic--and I think I may have found it: Romanian Red.  My RR's are producing large bulbs right now, enough to make it possible for me to save the largest cloves and replant them without buying new seed stock.  An additional bonus is the garlic scapes that I just harvested and pickled--I had no idea what a scape was until I grew my own garlic, and now I wonder how I lived this long without them.  They're only in season for a brief period in the spring, and each hardneck garlic plant produces only one--so they're relatively rare.  But oh my god, how delicious with scrambled eggs, or pickled!

I laugh, with a smile, at how tame my life has become.   Tomorrow I am going to go to the local food bank to see about volunteering possibilities.  Since I stopped with the Mountain Rescue gig, I've been sort of aimlessly looking around for ways to give back to the community again.  My tendency to overplant and the obviously huge amount of Red Kuri squashes that I'm going to have made me consider ways to give the produce away--and the food bank accepts gardener's donations.  And that made me wonder if perhaps I could do more than just that.

And now I'm googling ways to become a certified master gardener...

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Greenhouse

My new greenhouse (and a bit of the garden)

My garden makes me happy.  :)  The greenhouse is this one, if you are interested.  It was a bit pricey, but I really wanted a local, wood, long-term greenhouse with low maintenance, and it was the only one that fit the bill.

I've now stocked it with peppers, and Laura has put some tomatoes in there for her volunteer gig.

Monday, June 20, 2011

A small, unfocussed blur; a standing chill

A squash blossom in my garden

With rue my heart is laden
For golden friends I had,
For many a rose-lipt maiden
And many a lightfoot lad.

By brooks too broad for leaping
The lightfoot boys are laid
The rose-lipt girls are sleeping
In fields where roses fade.
I worked in the garden tonight.  Vines tied upwards, new dark driplines run through beds, raspberries picked and thinned; twine around black currants to restrain their rowdy growth, eggshells at the foot of the tomato plants, garlic scapes snipped and quickly sautéed in oil with freshly cut broccoli.   

A riot of carrots


There is a robin nest just behind the garden fence.  From 6:00am until 9:00:pm, the little chicks cry for food.  "meep meep meep meep meep meep meep meep meep meep meep....."

I exulted when the dripline timer turned on right on schedule, and reveled in the focussed water on my plants, which have suffered so much in this cold spring.  But tomorrow the pieces of the greenhouse arrive, and I'll put it together and know again that special greenhouse smell that I recall so well.  I would find my grandfather would asleep in his, surrounded by tomatoes.  At the age of 45, exactly how old I am as of last saturday, he uprooted his family and they fled for their lives to a country where neither he nor they spoke the language; he went from a job as a harbor master of a busy port to a field laborer, picking fruit.  It was a familiar job: he had grown up helping my great grandfather tend the gardens of an imperial estate.  He didn't complain, he was thankful for a second chance at life that many like him did not get.

I can't believe I'm fucking 45 years old!  I will take a page from my grandfather's book of life, and not complain.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Secret Meeting


As I get older, I yearn more for more alone-time. I've always kind of been this way, but lately it has been getting stronger. Before my father died, I remember going crabbing in Puget Sound with him and his best friend; as we sat on the boat after dropping the pots, the two of them got to talking about wives. "Yes, it can be difficult to be married", said his friend, "but just imagine how lonely it would be without them".  My dad nodded in agreement.

This is completely opposite to the way I am, and I'm not certain why. I am perfectly satisfied not seeing anyone at all and having no human contact for a month or more. Perhaps this makes me a bit of a hermit... if so, I don't really have a problem with that.

There is an older woman who lives on my street who, I believe, lives alone.  She walks up the sidewalk in the evening, seemingly with great purpose, but the sidewalk ends just a few hundred meters on where the street itself terminates in an explosion of weeds.  So she turns around, and comes back down with the same intensity.  I once greeted her, but she ignored me, effortlessly.  She doesn't look at me as she passes by.

My neighbors are an older couple.  They spend little time together, and when they do, it seems pro forma.  He mows, she gardens.  He calls out to me occasionally, when I'm pulling clover out of my raised beds.  "Hey neighbor!" he says, like Ned Flanders.  I think he's forgotten my name, since I only introduced myself to him once.  "How goes it?" he asks.  I say something mildly despairing about slugs, and then ask him what they're growing in their own two raised garden beds.  "Fuck, I don't know.  That's Carolyn's shit, I don't care what it is, I just water the shit, she does whatever she does with it", he answers.

I don't have any issues with being alone.  But I never, ever, want to be with someone that I treat like that.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Unschooling



An interim post while I get used to blogging again...

Here is a very interesting story about a teenager who has never been to school.  I heard it on NPR last night as I was driving home with a carload of compost for the garden.  At first I scoffed at the idea, but the more I think about it, the more I have concluded that it's a pretty inspired way to teach.  The only thing that I think might be hard would be the transition from no structure to university classes, but that's about it.  Just think about never going through the typical high school experience, and instead growing up and learning at your own rate, and in your own style.