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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: In the Garden

Sowing Seeds

10 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home

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Oklahoma Gardening

Forty little tomato seedlings are growing big on a sunny window ledge inside our home.  I planted these little darlings two weeks ago and they rewarded me by germinating four days later.  So far, sowing tomato seeds appears to be easier than sowing seeds into the minds of adult children.

When the weather is nice, I take my garden tray outside so the seedlings can grow strong with the Oklahoma wind and avoid the damping off disease so easily contracted without proper air circulation.  Outdoor visits also help them ‘harden off’ to avoid later transplant shock.

When raising children, we practiced something similar.   As readiness was shown, our kids were given greater outside-the-home freedoms and experiences.  This was my husband’s doing more than mine.  His philosophy was to grant our precious teens space to sow any wild oats while still under parental loving care. 

We expected blooper choices.  And we were not disappointed.  I remember reeling both girls back inside with a safety net — with affection, what we called a gilded cage.  Some children just need a little longer to mature, that’s all.  But in their own time and space and way, all four have grown strong inner constitutions to thrive in our lovely but sometimes dangerous world of pests.

If all goes well, I’ll set my first tomato transplants into the ground at month end– followed by another set in mid-April.  The first will be insulated with an outer shell of  black plastic pots (leftovers from last fall’s planting spree) filled with newspaper.  I’m told early spring plantings, properly insulated, will increase production and still survive frosty spring-time visits of winter temperatures – down to 25̊ degrees Fahrenheit.   

We transplanted our children from Texas to Oklahoma, in a similar way, by surrounding them with plenty of loving family.   The girls often took advantage of a home-cooked meal as they grew homesick for a familiar face or a taste of home.  The boys received some free meals as well — and help several times when a car battery died.   Today, except for missing the taste of great seafood, you’d think our children were all natives.

I’ve haven’t had such good experience in transplanting tomato varieties from Texas to Oklahoma.   My plantings from the last two years have died on the vine — either from spider mites or Fusarium wilt.   So this year I’m planting OSU recommended varieties for Oklahoma.  My seedlings are Big Beef Tomato –a disease resistant variety that has shown natural resistance to spider mites.   

My children have shown a natural resistance to tomatoes.  Perhaps I didn’t sow enough seed in that direction.

Mini-Easter

08 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home, Soul Care

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Oklahoma Gardening, Soul Care

I love how every Sunday is a mini-Easter — a feast day set aside to celebrate the resurrection of Christ — and that the six Sundays during Lent are no exception. 

The season of Lent is more meaningful if I make a sacrifice.  So this year I decided to give up breakfast, easily my favorite meal.  This means I fast until lunch six days of the week.  And on Sundays, I feast with the return of breakfast.  Today I broke my fast twice.  I ate pancakes with my husband, then had a cup of coffee with Lara while she enjoyed her own short stack of cakes. 

While she was eating, I enjoyed hearing Lara talk about her new life in OKC.  Oh, she’s embracing it all with joy.  Every brand spanking new inch of it.  New job.  New home.  New friends to make.  She’s a special gal, this second-string daughter of mine.   Can’t wait for my first-string  ‘kids’ to meet her.

After Lara left, I worked in the garden with my husband.  Three short hours later, our front yard has been transformed into quite the looker.  With lawn mowed, weeds pulled, rose bushes trimmed and many, many Lirope now sporting a fresh ‘haircut’, it looks like spring outside.  Down on my knees, I could see all the new life bursting forth — baby mums, flower buds on my Spirea, green shoots of Lirope peeking through the dirt.  Is there any color lovelier than spring green? 

We ended the day cheering on the Thunder, as our players racked up another victory.  Talk about new life!  Our team has won 7 of their last 10 home games — and this one without their big stars.  Of course they remain last in their division.  But even so, this team looks different from the one I first watched in November.  The recent trades and the experience gained by our young players is starting to pay-off. 

My entire day was like watching some lovely mini-Easter parade — as I observed the new life in Lara, my garden and the Thunder.  I’m lucky to have snagged a seat so close to the action.  Because it let the joy of new life bump smack up against me.   It didn’t hurt one bit. 

There Be Dragons

11 Wednesday Feb 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Soul Care

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Oklahoma Gardening

Out in the back garden, my citrus trees are in a blissful state of recovery.  No longer trapped indoors by freezing temperatures, one might think they were on spring break, as these days of fresh balmy air filled with sun and rain have chased away all their winter blues.  Meanwhile, holed up in my house, I too am in recovery with plenty of woes of my own.  With my pride in shreds and more than a few doubts about the joys of becoming a certified master gardener, I fear my winter woes may not resolve so easily.

 

It began last week at my final master gardening class.  Aready mid-way through the certification process, I’ve received seventy hours of instruction from some of the state’s finest horticultural instructors.  So what stands before me are sixty hours of service behind the county extension’s master gardening help desk. And to help prepare me for this –under the guise of this lowly training class–was my most important lesson lying in wait. 

 

It took place in the quiet hours of a cold Oklahoma morning, with phone lines grown silent with winter.  The first two hours flew by without incident.  But that all ended when my phone began to ring.  As I listened to the problem being described, I began to realize that I knew absolutely nothing about this first caller’s question.  I racked my brain for answers, only to discover that all my gardening knowledge had vacated the premises.  Trying to hold on to the last vestiges of a calm façade, I hurriedly turned to the voluminous set of OSU Fact Sheets that sat on my desk, frantically flipping page after page in search of an answer for the poor soul who had the unfortunate luck to get stuck with me as their “expert.” Oh noooooo, Mr. Bill. These fact sheets do not hold all the answers.  It was only then that I realized that there comes a time in every master gardener’s life when it’s time to abandon the pride of your own help desk and go crawling for your own help.  When I left my desk, with tiny pieces of pride shattered all across it, I found my answer easily off the top of my trainer’s head.  

  

There is a God…..the One that is a whole lot easier to find down on my knees, whether at the help desk…..or in my garden kneeling within the rich dirt of humus.  No matter which, there is much to beware of in master gardening… as hiding under that ‘puffed’ up title I have desired for so long were some of my worst enemes — pride and honor and glory.  Yes, there be dragons in yonder garden.  But there’ll be no need to do battle on my own.  The help desk will help slay them, or at last beat them into submission.     

 

Editors Note:  Bill Geer is Oklahoma County Extension Director

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