Garden Journal

Entries from March 1, 2009 - March 31, 2009

Friday
Mar202009

Lost

Oh, be still my racing mind. Lately it's been so hard to slow it, shush it and keep it in the present. Especially this morning -- I've been gearing up for it for a weeks now -- the first day of Spring. I'm already thinking about all I want to do, do, do: finish cleaning up the dregs of winter on the balcony, make a quick to the garden centre for seedling mix and seeds, add fresh vermicompost to the soil, prepare containers for seedlings, sow seeds, re-line the hanging baskets with fresh coconut fibre, take photos of emerging bulbs....The list grows fast like a bad weed.

But if I don't make time and effort to be still, I will be lost. I know this. I've known this for a while.

This poem came to me in a weekly email yesterday -- just what I needed. First "gardening" task of the day: plant this in my heart.

Standing Still

Lost

Stand still. The trees ahead and bushes beside you
Are not lost. Wherever you are is called Here,
And you must treat it as a powerful stranger,
Must ask permission to know it and be known.
The forest breathes. Listen. It answers,
I have made this place around you.
If you leave it, you may come back again, saying Here.
No two trees are the same to Raven.
No two branches are the same to Wren.
If what a tree or a bush does is lost on you,
You are surely lost. Stand still. The forest knows
Where you are. You must let it find you.

- David Wagoner

From the book "Traveling Light: Collected and New Poems"
published by the University of Illinois Press in 1999.

Thursday
Mar192009

"Obamas to Plant White House Vegetable Garden"

You likely already have read or heard the news but I thought I'd share the press release I received from Kitchen Gardeners International this evening because it tells the story of the "Eat the View" campaign.

 
100,000 Applaud Announcement of a New White House Food Garden
Environment, Nation'’s Food System and People's Health Stand to Benefit

(Scarborough, Maine) –100,000 people signed a petition asking the Obamas to replant a Victory Garden at the White House, and recent news reports indicate that they are about to reap what they sowed. 

For advocates of sustainable and healthy foods, this harvest of good news was as welcome as the summer'’s first red-ripe tomato.  “I'’m thrilled for the Obama family and for all who will be inspired by their example to grow gardens of their own this year,” said Roger Doiron, founder of the nonprofit Kitchen Gardeners International and leader of the successful petition campaign, “Eat the View.” 

Launched in February 2008, Eat the View proposed that the Obamas replant a White House Victory Garden while planting a few extra rows for the hungry. The campaign used viral videos and social networking technologies like Facebook to grow a large support base, attract international media attention and help inspire a larger grassroots effort. In January, 2009, Eat the View won the “On Day One” contest sponsored by the United Nations Foundation, beating out 4,000 other entries and resulting in thousands of messages being sent to the White House in support of its proposal.

Over the course of the past month, the Eat the View campaign has touted the economic benefits of home gardens as part of its pitch to White House staff members.  As proof, Doiron and his wife spent nine months weighing and recording each vegetable they pulled from their 1,600-square-foot garden outside Portland, Maine. After counting the final winter leaves of salad, they found that they had saved about $2,150 by growing produce for their family of five instead of buying it.  “If you consider that there are millions of American families who could be making similar, home-grown savings, those are no small potatoes,” Doiron said. 

Although the White House garden campaign is now winding down, Doiron says the Eat the View campaign is just getting warmed up.  “Now that the Obamas are on board, we’re going to be reaching out to other people and identifying other high-profile pieces of land that could be transformed into edible landscapes.  Sprawling lawns around governors’ residences, schoolyards, vacant urban lots: those are all views that should be eaten.”

 
History of Harvest at the White House

While the Obamas’ garden and the online technologies that campaigned for it might be new, the idea of an edible landscape at the White House is not.  Throughout its history, the White House has been home to food gardens of different shapes and sizes and even to a lawn-mowing herd of sheep in 1918.  The appeal of the White House garden project, Doiron asserts, is that it serves as a bridge between the country’s past and its future.  “The last time food was grown on the White House lawn was in 1943, when the country was at war, the economy was struggling and people were looking to the First Family for leadership. It made sense before and it makes sense again as we try to live within our own means and those of the planet.” 

 
Additional info:

Eat the View campaign website: http://www.eattheview.org/


History the White House as an edible landscape from 1800 to the present:   http://www.eattheview.org/page/history-1

Eat the View artwork: http://www.flickr.com/photos/42913695@N00/sets/72157608739986075/

Testimonials on behalf of the Eat the View campaign from noted national and international figures:  http://www.eattheview.org/page/testimonials-1

Eat the View campaign videos: http://www.eattheview.org/videos

Bio and photos of Roger Doiron:

http://www.kitchengardeners.org/2005/10/about_roger_doiron.html

http://www.flickr.com/photos/42913695@N00/sets/72157608739762927/

 

Wednesday
Mar112009

A week of crocuses...

....and a post without words:

Getting ready to unfurl

Yellow duet

Crocus vernus 1

Purple & yellow

(All photos taken on my balcony, March 1st-6th, 2009.)

Monday
Mar022009

March 1st -- in like a lamb

Sunny side up: On the first day of March, the first yellow crocus in my balcony garden unfurled in the warm sunshine.

I, too, "unfurled" a bit while working outside as I finally was able to remove one layer: the fleece beneath the Gortex. Alternating between being overdressed and underdressed for the weather -- a sign March has arrived.

 

First Crocus
©Christine Klocek-Lim (source: November Sky, 2006 poems)

This morning, flowers cracked open
the earth’s brown shell. Spring
leaves spilled everywhere
though winter’s stern hand
could come down again at any moment
to break the delicate yolk
of a new bloom.

The crocus don’t see this as they chatter
beneath a cheerful petal of spring sky.
They ignore the air’s brisk arm
as they peer at their fresh stems, step
on the leftover fragments
of old leaves.

When the night wind twists them to pieces,
they will die like this: laughing,
tossing their brilliant heads
in the bitter air.