Garden Journal

Monday
Aug062007

British Columbia Day, August 6th, 2007

Because there is no national holiday to celebrate gardening (how can this be?), I've decided to post garden or plant-related themes related to the Canadian stat holidays.

Today was British Columbia (BC) Day. Here are links to photos of edible berries of coastal BC:

Alaskan blueberry Vaccinium alaskaense

Dwarf blueberry Vaccinium caespitosum

Bog cranberry Oxycoccus oxycoccos

Salmonberry Rubus spectabilis

Black raspberry Rubus leucodermis

Thimbleberry Rubus parviflorus

Himalayan blackberry Rubus discolor

Trailing blackberry Rubus ursinus

Saskatoon Amelanchier alnifolia

To learn more about how these plants were traditionally used by the aboriginal peoples as well as how to identify the plants in the wild, I highly recommend the field guide Plants of the Pacific Northwest Coast: Washington, Oregon, BC and Alaska (2004) or the original edition (I have this one), Plants of Coastal British Columbia including Washington, Oregon & Alaska (1994).

Friday
Aug032007

Vegetables with a sense of humour

pacchoicarp3.jpg

This evening I did a Google search to learn more about Asian vegetables -- I'm planning on sowing pac choi this weekend -- and came across Love Carrots and Other Vegetables, the source of this photo of pac choi carp. I think I'll allow myself to be distracted by this quirky site and leave the serious reading and writing until tomorrow.

Sunday
Jul292007

The ethics of eating (interview with Barbara Kingsolver)

I think the subject of food seems daunting because there are so many different questions, so many different problems. And that's something that really compelled me about writing this book. I love to start with a huge unanswerable boggling kind of question and see if I can whittle it down into the shape of a really good yarn. You know, I just love to see if I can give it a plot and make you laugh all along the way and maybe make you cry at the end, and create something that will invite you in. And then when you're finished and you close the book, maybe you'll step out into the world in a slightly different way and ask your own questions and answer the questions in your own way.
- Barbara Kingsolver in an interview with Krista Tippet, host of Speaking of Faith

Ever since I read The Poisonwood Bible seven years ago, Barbara Kingsolver has been one of my favourite writers. Her latest book, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle is on my "to read" list and today after listening to the podcast of a recent American public media program, this book has now moved to the #1 spot on the list.

Here is the link to the web page with all your listening and reading options for this episode of Speaking of Faith.

I downloaded this podcast and listened to it on my ipod while walking this afternoon, but it's so engaging you may want to just sit and listen. I'm going to replay it later and do just this.

Thursday
Jul262007

"I don't like living in a dirty town

This is the context of my urban garden this summer: Canada Line construction (and Cambie Street deconstruction and worst of all, merchant devastation) one block to the east; high-rise condo construction 1/2 block to the west; busy alley less than 50 feet from my balcony. Tearing down and building up, digging holes and filling holes, and the daily traffic to and from work -- all this generates a lot of dirt. Not the good kind that nourishes plants. It's what I call dead dirt, or simply, filth.

So today, after spending two hours cleaning the grime and dust from my balcony garden, a task I should repeat weekly, nothing expresses my feelings better than this song by Mother, Mother:

Dirty Town (excerpt)

I don't like living in a dirty town
Cause a dirty town gets me down

I saved up and i bought some land
Cause i can't stand living in a dirty town
Yeah i pinched my pennies and i put em down
And i washed my hands of a dirty town

Plant my seeds in the ground
Yeah i put em down in my new found land
Cause you can't plant seeds in a dirty town
No you can't plant seeds in a dirty town

I choppin' firewood choppin' firewood
Chop chop chop
Just like a country boy should be chopping wood
I country
My kindling sticks are the perfect little width
Kindling sticks

Get gone from a dirty town
Everybody now
Get gone from a dirty town
Ah-ah-ah-all i need is a chicken wire / and a chicken feed
And a ah-ah-ah-all i see is a new found land fertility, yeah!

You can listen to this fun, smart song on the band's My Space page here.

Friday
Jul202007

Kitchen Gardeners International

Enjoying a peach
Have you subscribed to the KGI newsletter yet? I received the latest edition this morning. I really need to stop checking my email before I start gardening. I'm doing a clean-up today -- eventually -- but the newsletter looked too luscious to save until the evening so I've sampled some of the contents. Who could resist that sweet Georgia peach?

This issue covers garlic, cucumbers, tomatoes peaches, 101 simple summer meals and g-pods (sounds intriguing).

Photo downloaded from the newsletter. Credit: Savannah Grandfather.