Posts Tagged ‘weeds’

Gardens & Golf Courses

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Garden FenceWe’d just about given up on our country garden, so ravaged by “critters” this year, in spite of my sending one ground-hog to its maker.  The weeds can have it, except for a tiny plot that is still pumping out jalapeños. It’s just not worth gardening a spot you cannot sufficiently fence and watch, even when you’ve conquered the rainwater problem with a good rain-barrel system.

So we began to seek a spot to grow vegetables closer to our home. Home would be the ideal place, of course, but it lacks the eight hours of direct sun that’s a minimum for vegetables.  It can support herbs and flowers; that’s enough for now, at least. Then, as fate had it, my employer came through with a plot at the community garden, open to faculty and staff by lottery in spring, available by chance in fall.

Second-season gardening has its pleasures and sadness. The growing season is short and the light is waning. Then comes the frost.

Yet the season started with a pleasant surprise. As soon as the weed-whacker roared to life and cut one swath across a plot abandoned by the previous gardener, I spotted a plump bell pepper, then another and another. Soon Fern and I were clearing our plot by hand, and we found several tomato plants, a cucumber vine, carrots, broccoli, and, of course, peppers. The weeds were up to 24 inches at least, but in four hours of toiling in the sun, we had the garden cleared, the plants staked, and quite a bit of produce harvested. Then we set about planting seeds for lettuce and spinach under screened boxes to deter birds and rodents, setting out seedling collards and more lettuce for a fall harvest until frost comes.

As we took advantage of  our predecessor’s laxness, I wondered why would anyone walk away from a productive garden plot, especially one with compost, water, and mulch provided for free?

“Too busy….too much work,” I can almost hear the departed gardener saying. What nonsense. We all should have to work for at least some of our food. I suspect that in the not-distant future, we all will.

Not one hundred yards from the community garden, golfers spend hours wandering around after little white balls on a  landscape that requires thousands of gallons of water daily to keep green. In the early mornings, as I carefully water my new garden, organized to minimize run-off, I see firehose-sized sprayers at work until the excess water runs off and down the abandonned, overgrown road that runs past the garden gate.

Two worlds meet there, one sustainable and sane, the other doomed and excessive.

In a coming time of permanent simplicity, both of Peak Oil and clean water, I think I know what the future will bring. It won’t be more golfing.  But for now, I’ll just shrug, tend my plants, and pass on skills until the world renews itself again. Even as light wanes and the fall brings wrath from indifferent elements and an enraged electorate, that’s my seed-planting hope.

I’d rather live with hope than bitterness and rage, just as I’d rather work to grow my own food than to chase a little white ball around a chemically dose fairway.

That Scamp, English Ivy

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

It’s hard to believe how a plant that is so quaint, in one setting, becomes a nightmare in another.

This little garden faerie, so demure and coy, was molested by English Ivy. Today I pushed the marauder back further, given the blessings of recent and long-overdue rain.  Strand by strand, I uncovered native Columbine and parts of my struggling Rosemary plant from the dark green creepers.

In England, ivy is a rather frowzy gentleman, lending his charm to old buildings with a result as cozy as a Harris Tweed, a briar pipe full of bright and burley, and a “hot cuppa” on a chilly and damp afternoon.

Yet bring the English gent to the New World, and he becomes a lager-lout, sprawling, intruding, wrecking.

One principle of my garden-practice involves what I call “necessary cruelty,” where one simply has to intervene when Nature gets out of balance. I planted those first sprigs of ivy in an attempt to control erosion at the edge of our property. Now, it’s a carpet, joining another from my deceased neighbor’s garden (where poison ivy joins the party in the vegetable mosh-pit).

Now that two young fellows have bought that house, I’m actually pleased that they’ll do some judicious spraying of Roundup (the only toxin I own, with a quart of concentrate lasting me many years). The new neighbors promise to be very careful of my garden. I’ll go over to assist with my heavy-duty weed-whacker and sprayer on The Day of Doom.

My own organic methods of pulling and trimming work for me. Readers seeking to reduce another pest, Bermuda or “Wire” Grass, might want to look back at an old piece I did for Whole News (follow this link to all of my old columns). By there’s a lesson in the ivy beyond necessary cruelty: knowing the land and not planting foolishly.

Blessed Mabon and may your gardens go to sleep peacefully during the Dark Half of the year.

As a belated PS, I want to thank anyone who recalls my old monthly column of this name in the long-defunct free publication, Whole News.  It appeared in an era before blogs got popular, and I hope this blog will interest my fellow UUs, neo-pagans, and open-minded souls walking any spiritual path who seek ways to bring a bit of mindfulness and sustainable practice into their gardens.