Backyard Edibles

(Via gardenauthor)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 21:37:00

Gardening Question of the Day for Thursday, July 3, 2008

(Via Gardening Question of the Day (from The Old Farmer's Almanac))

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 19:00:00

Should I stake my Chinese pea pods as they grow? (answer).

From The Old Farmer's Almanac.

Top 20

(Via Heronswood Voice )

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 16:49:12

Here’s the wrap-up for the main 2008 season, although we’re still shipping. This consists of late 2007 right up to July 1, 20080. Mostly newer items and heavily colored or textured.

1.  Hellebore ‘Tanager’ – Lenten Rose
 
2.  Trachelospermum ‘Tricolor’ – Confederate Jasmine
 
3.  Hakonechloa macra ‘Aureola’ – Japanese Forest Grass
 
4.  Hellebore ‘Green Heron’ – Lenten Rose
 
5.  Hellebore ‘Gold Finch’ – Lenten Rose
 
6.  Hakonechloa ‘Beni Kazi’– Japanese Forest Grass
 
7.  Hellebore ‘Winter Wren’ – Lenten Rose
 
8.  Disporum cantoniense ‘Night Heron’ – Fairy Bells
 
9.  Buxus microphylla var. japonica ‘Morris Midget’ – Japanese Boxwood
 
10.   Hellebore x hybridus ‘Snow Bunting’– Lenten Rose
 
11.  Blechnum spicant – Deer Fern
 
12.  Papaver orientale ‘Patty’s Plum’ – Oriental Poppy
 
13.  Musa basjoo – Hardy Japanese Banana
 
14.  Hellebore ‘Painted Bunting’ – Lenten Rose
 
15.  Papaver ruprifragum ‘Tangerine Parfait’ – Spanish Poppy
 
16.  Campanula ‘Pink Octopus’ - Bellflower
 
17.  Hellebore ‘Rosy Finch’ – Lenten Rose
 
18.  Juncus effusus ‘Spiralis’ – Corkscrew Rush
 
19.  Hellebore ‘Ibis’ – Lenten Rose
 
20.  Hydrangea ‘The Swan’ PPAF
 
 

How long have you been gardening?

(Via Gardening Tips 'n' Ideas)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 14:52:43

old-gardener.jpg I can't pinpoint the exact moment that I started my hobby but discounting the few radish seeds I tried when I was 12, I think the defining moment was when my wife and I moved into our first house together. Suddenly we were cast into the garden and realised that it wasn't going to look after itself. To be honest...half the problem with our first garden was that it had already been treated that way and seriously needed some TLC.

After a few more house moves over the next year and a half (5 homes in total) we finally settled into a house previously owned by an orchid grower. He had passed on several years ago so the gardens were anything but immaculate but it did hoard some interesting things from its past.

Two bores, a plethora of garden pots, bundles of fertilisers and a veggie patch that screamed for some hard labour and attention. Part of the reason we chose that place was for the potential the gardens held. I'd love to tell you that we left that place in schmiko condition yet while it never became the masterpiece it was a great start and helped us cut our gardening teeth.

We've now been gardening here in our current location for the past 5 years and my hobby took on another level because of it. A friend lent me a book on Australian natives prior to us starting here and if he hadn't I would have continued thinking they were boring, bland substitutes for the exotics that my parents generation cultivated.

I've tried, and am still trying, new methods and concepts that may seem a little out of the box for most gardeners but that's what our hobby is all about, isn't it? Learning and failing forward. For me, the journey's only just begun and the 14 years I've enjoyed thus far is really just my adolescence period. I'm certainly looking forward to the next 14 and beyond.

So, how long have you been plying your craft? Was there a defining moment that you could trace back and unequivocally state "This was the day I started gardening!"?

Dr. Singer

(Via Heronswood Voice )

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 12:34:18

Sholem Singer taught me Medieval History at DePaul University in 1974 and 1975.  He was probably in his mid-sixties, with the light blue cotton shirts Chicago guys used to wear buttoned up to the collar with no tie, and black trousers.  He was a fantastic teacher:  erudite, tough and “old school”.

Once he interrupted me when I said I had an idea I wanted “to propound”.  ” ‘Propose’, George, you want to ‘propose’.  Never use words like ‘propound’.  I charge a fee for them.”  However, I made the mistake again with another word I don’t remember.  “George, stop!  Use the simplest word.  I don’t need the extra money.  My congregation takes good care of me,” he deadpanned.

Dr. Singer was a part-time rabbi, a kind of substitute teacher, as he put it.  He was from the same community on Chicago’s West Side that produced Saul Bellow, Isaac Rosenfeld and Benny Goodman.  After the immigrant families landed there from the chaotic cities and towns of Central and Eastern Europe, they went straight to work.  When he became passionate in class, which wasn’t often, it was only to distinguish Jews, Christians and “the Arabs”.  He was neither sanguine nor choleric about Israel, but pessimistic, remote and even cryptic at times, as if he knew more about the 1973 War than we did.  Once he seemed very depressed, but later he bucked up.  It was a night class which may have been the reason.

He gave me two great insights: one historical and one personal.  The first was in a class about medieval religious persecution.  Jews were often pushed from villages to cities, and then on to other villages, or to swamps to form their own.  Some left on ships for foreign countries—those were the fortunate ones.  The sick, weak, solitary or compromised were often executed. Sometimes entire villages were destroyed with everyone in them. Then he focused on successful Jewish communities, on the survivors who stayed put and in many cases prospered.  At this point he turned and panned across the classroom, his eyes widened.

“Now I’m going to tell you a theory of a 19th century historian—a man named Tewksbury—that explains some of this survival process, and also explains the general historical fact that over the centuries the Jews became a very successful ethnic group, particularly in proportion to the larger populations with whom they lived.

“First of all, Tewksbury said that primogeniture was customary among gentiles, most significantly of the moneyed classes, the guilds, managers and staff of large estates, the property holders, and especially among the most successful of these—the aristocracy and nobility.  The first son was ‘crowned’, literally or figuratively, as the head of the next generation.  He got it all.  The second son would be the head protector, the merchant’s right hand enforcer, or the head of the militia group, right up to the head of the knights.  In other words, the warrior.  The third son, again up and down the social strata, entered the church—the monks and priests. So the mobility of the male children was set in three directions:  wealth and its often dangerous responsibilities, including the treacherous environment of court life.  Second, war and the preparation for it, which was often as fatal as the actual battles, which were fought by harsher methods and resulted in more carnage than ours today.  Finally, the priesthood, where marriage was forbidden. The life of the Christian male offspring of the upper classes was frequently early death, since soldiers were led by the knights and palace intrigues led to regimes being murdered or exiled. In the case of religion, no legitimate heirs were allowed.  They couldn’t have kids. These rules were absolute.  So, perhaps half the men would survive, then they would have heirs, and the next generation would repeat the process. Tewksbury called this ‘the degeneration of the top’ a gradual and relentless pruning of the best and brightest, so to speak.

“On the other hand, the Jews at this time had lives that were different in three significant ways. First, Jews were prohibited from the military, except as advisors, procurement agents or bankers.  But generally they were out of the military, certainly as soldiers or knights.  Also, a Jew rising in the aristocracy was so rare that it proved the rule, literally.  So the best and the brightest tended to survive wars.  On the other end of the spectrum, the poor, the old, the weak, the sick—of both sexes—were often the first to die in the persecutions and did so in large numbers.  Forced marches, labor, or mass executions would always include most or all of them.  Only the strong survived.  So this pruning took place at the bottom of the Jewish population.  No more future generations of the Darwinian “less fit”, if one believes that theory, which was known in Tewksbury’s time.

“Finally, the role of the matchmaker (and Dr. Singer lightened things up by referring to the musical Hello Dolly) was practiced in every town, village and neighborhood, and it was accepted, like marriages in India.  But the Jewish matchmaker was an organizing social force. Every community had them—large or small, rich or poor.  They married off class to class, up and down the layers of society.  This house to that house, this hut to that hut.  And rabbis were required to marry, and all their sons were encouraged either to become a rabbi or distinguish themselves in a profession that wasn’t outlawed.”

Dr. Singer concluded that there was a combination of factors in the middle ages favorable to both a mobile as well as stable Jewish culture, and a perpetuation of elites.  So that was Tewksbury.  Everyone in the class breathed a heavy sigh of relief.  He also said it was certainly not a popular academic theory, but it was worth considering.  He ended the class by saying that this phenomenon may have had a positive influence on the rise of the conversions to Judaism in remote villages of Central and Eastern Christiandom. In all, it was a great class.

Not a week goes by I don’t think of Dr. Singer.  My memory of him is a great comfort, especially in today’s dark, superficial and xenophobic atmosphere, where Muslims are considered sub-human. He helps me to understand that our present-day outcasts in the West—Africans, Turks, Muslims, Palestinians, Native Americans—will likely be the pruned, paired off and exponentially multiplying inheritors of tomorrow.  Let the Jews be their example, and God bless them.

The second great insight Dr. Singer shared was surprisingly personal and, at the time, seemed bizarre to me.  However, he was my academic adviser so I shouldn’t have been shocked.  I was still a bit naïve, owing to an isolated, rural boarding school.

At the end of a fruitful but contentious session with me, he concluded by going off the subject. 

“You know, George, you can do two things with your life: you should convert to Judaism and become a rabbi.  You’d make a good rabbi.  But it would be difficult.  But think about it.  If you don’t want to do that, then you should become a minister.  You were born to it.”

Stunned, I mumbled something like “Thanks, I really appreciate it”, but felt so strange that I got a little dizzy for a second.  No one had ever even talked with me that way.  He eyeballed me and then waved the meeting to an end and said good-bye.
 

Blueberries and Cool Caterpillars

(Via Girl Gone Gardening)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 12:32:00

Tips When Starting Your Own Organic Garden

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 12:25:18

When growing a Organic Garden theres things that can happen such as: Plants grown in more shade than they like, suffer greatly from this effect because top and root growth slows and soils tend to stay wetter increasing the rate of organic decomposition. Plants require more time, energy, and care to control pests and diseases than they expected. To address these problems, homeowners use chemical treatments and pesticides that endanger human health and safety, and create an environment that makes plants dependent on routine and expensive property maintenance contracts.

Growing Tomatoes - Little Known Secrets to Growing Ripe & Juicy Organic Tomatoes

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 12:01:58

Growing and enjoying your own tasty, mouth watering tomatoes for this garden season is easy once you follow these simple steps. Covers the crucial mistake that destroys most people's tomato garden (and how to avoid it), outlines easy 'tricks' that will make your tomato plants grow healthier, and much more!

Grow Your Own Popcorn!

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 11:50:53

How to grow popcorn in your backyard using planters, buckets, raised beds and more! Growing your own popcorn is very easy.

New Uses For Your Square Foot Garden Veggies

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-07-02, 11:21:05

What do you do if you have a monster tomato plant and you have 30-40 tomatoes all ripen at the same time? What about when you have 10 giant cucumbers sitting in your fridge waiting to be eaten and you can't stomach the idea of another cucumber sandwich? Or flocks of bush beans that you didn't realize should have been staggered several weeks apart? I have the solution ... BUILD YOUR FOOD STORAGE!