God's creativity blooms forth. |
With gardens offering retreat-like benefits along with countless practical perks, it’s no wonder the National Gardening Association (NGA) cites Americans as “consistently rating gardening as a favorite hobby.” In fact, NGA statistics show a 19% increase in Americans planning to grow edibles from 2008 to 2009.
St. Francis, lover of God and His creation. |
Of course, one stimulus to such enthusiasm might be recession. A nicely maintained food garden yields an average $500 return, according to NGA. Adding a few new perennials like asparagus, chives or rhubarb yearly expands a base of nice varieties to harvest early spring through late October. Growing annual seeds indoors to plant outside early spring is a cheerful, winter’s end project that also helps cut food costs.
I find the practical and esthetical blend of gardens irresistible. Phenomenal changes occur daily, and sometimes, even hourly. Early morning squash blossoms expand, begging to be stuffed with cheese, dredged in egg and flour, and stir-fried into a gourmet delicacy. Snap peas unready to pick at 7 AM, plump by dinner.
What a luxury, loading the table with fresh-picked produce. |
I’ve lost my fear of bees, since we so nicely coexist. Robins and mourning doves flit by, unfazed by my now-familiar presence. The neighbor dog “Buck” pops his dark, Labrador head over the fence to grin, until I give him a friendly pat.
As for the plants, clearing riotous weeds to reveal order seems allegorical. Learning a “green thumb” is not genetic as much as developed through persistence, trial and error, and following wise advice from more experienced gardeners, is heartening.
Echinacea -- beautiful and medicinal. |
I’ve had my summers of growing tomatoes lush with foliage but bare of fruit, planting seeds that refused germination, babying green peppers to watch them spread leaves but refuse to flower or bear. But for the past several years, my mini, raised-bed gardens, have flourished.
After a friend recommended Mel Bartholomew’s method of “Square Foot Gardening” a few years ago, I devised manageable plots in raised beds. Amending soil with equal portions of compost, peat and vermiculite, made it fluffy and amenable to tender plants. (I later learned people are raising health concerns over vermiculite, so I’ve switched to perlite, an amorphous volcanic glass.) Such methods make gardening accessible to the elderly, very young, developmentally disabled, people recovering from illness -- even those with severe physical limitations.
Planting gourmet lettuce in partial shade helps plants survive the heat. I'm still harvesting lettuce in August. |
In fact, I suffered from a concussion and neck injury this summer and spent minimal time outside, yet still found my micro-gardens manageable, harvesting baskets of beans, hearty quantities of cilantro, and gourmet lettuce galore. Fresh-picked raspberries garnish breakfasts. Spicy Egyptian scallions enliven sandwiches. Heirloom tomato plants are flowering and fruiting, promising an abundant yield.
One day, when healing from my injuries seemed interminable, I clapped on a hat, sat cross-legged next to my string beans, and sang while I harvested, until the blues lifted. I have a weakness for old, sentimental songs, and I enjoy singing this favorite hymn from 1913 that sums up the lure of a garden:
I come to the garden alone
While the dew is still on the roses
And the voice I hear
Sounding in my ear,
The Son of God discloses
And I walk with Him
And I talk with Him
And He tells me I am His own
And the joy I feel
As I tarry here
None other has ever known…
By C. Austin Miles.
A garden's delicate beauty helps us transcend earth. |
Not only does gardening provide inexpensive, nutrition-rich food, develop biceps (from shoveling, weeding, constructing supports for plants, etc.), provide sun’s Vitamin D through our hours of labor, and soothe frazzled nerves, it helps us transcend the earth, reaping rich spiritual rewards. Of course, frequenting the sacraments and adoration chapel, nurturing a rich prayer life, reading scripture, are all foundational. But for a nice hobby to enrich one's walk in faith, gardening is ideal. The vibrant palette and fragrance of plants is uplifting. The teeming life of worms and butterflies, bees and songbirds seems optimistic. They’re tireless and productive, as we should be. Seeing piquant and healing herbs proliferate and tomatoes plump transmits this incredible sense of God’s creative genius. It’s all so inspiring.
An "outdoor room" with a reflective mood. |
God visited the Garden of Eden just before sunset (Genesis 3:8). Jesus chose a garden for quiet prayer in the final hours of his life. And for several Sundays in July, readings in the Liturgy were horticultural. Matthew 13, for example, refers to seeds cast on rich or rocky ground, and probes questions of why weeds coexist with fruitful plants. Struggling with recalcitrant weeds, scrubbing stubborn soil from gardening-calloused fingers, encountering thorny stems on delicately flowered plants – all help us relate more personally to God’s workings in creation and our lives.
Religious art and statuary turn gardens into retreats. |
1) Go organic. According to the February 1995 American Journal of Public Health, the risk of children developing cancer is increased four times in homes where chemical weed and insect killers are used. Corn gluten for heartening grass to be more weed-resistant, liquid garlic for pest control and encouraging robust growth, and nematodes to curb grubs, are just a few natural solutions we’ve found for common gardening woes.
2) Planting in raised beds divided into miniature plots provides protection from flooding and a grid for a wider variety of plants.
3) Raising planting beds on waist-high stilts makes gardening accessible to the elderly and disabled.
4) Amending soil with 1/3 portions of peat, compost, and a substance like perlite keeps growing medium fertile and nicely aerated.
5) Drying out more easily than plots sewn directly into the ground, raised beds must be watered diligently.
6) Adding religious art and statuary turns your plot into a prayer garden. Saint Fiacre is the patron saint of gardeners, Saint Francis is popularly associated with nature, and a Blessed Virgin statue surrounded by lilies becomes a “Mary Garden.”
7) Chatting up knowledgeable workers at a local garden shop specializing in organic, heirloom and regional plants, helps you discover special, hearty or unusual varieties that grow well in your planting zone.
8) Exchanging clippings of perennials with friends inexpensively adds plants like strawberries, scallions and mint to your garden.
9) Adding layers of newspapers and then covering deeply with woodchips or peat creates pathways and borders between planting beds. It looks attractive and is a cheap, efficient way to keep down weeds.
10) Starting late in the growing season is fine. Some crops, like garlic, can be planted in the fall. Plywood frames for raised beds can be assembled over winter, and indoor composting systems even allow all-year composting.
11) Following good composting techniques will heat your pile internally and kill weed seeds, so you won’t be sowing weeds with your veggie seeds.
12) Taking time to enjoy the garden makes all your effort worthwhile. Put a chair there and a little table for your mug of coffee or tea, and bask in your garden’s beauty, preferably early morning when the “dew is still on the roses,” or in the golden glow of dusk. Even a five-minute visit before or after the day’s work, is rejuvenating.
13) Weeding ten minutes daily keeps maintenance under control.
14) Involving children in planting and planning beds, even if gardening isn’t their “thing,” helps them develop a good work ethic. As part of the household, they should contribute a fair share in the production and harvesting of fresh food for the table. Who knows? Some day they may even continue the gardening tradition within their own families.
2) Planting in raised beds divided into miniature plots provides protection from flooding and a grid for a wider variety of plants.
3) Raising planting beds on waist-high stilts makes gardening accessible to the elderly and disabled.
4) Amending soil with 1/3 portions of peat, compost, and a substance like perlite keeps growing medium fertile and nicely aerated.
5) Drying out more easily than plots sewn directly into the ground, raised beds must be watered diligently.
6) Adding religious art and statuary turns your plot into a prayer garden. Saint Fiacre is the patron saint of gardeners, Saint Francis is popularly associated with nature, and a Blessed Virgin statue surrounded by lilies becomes a “Mary Garden.”
7) Chatting up knowledgeable workers at a local garden shop specializing in organic, heirloom and regional plants, helps you discover special, hearty or unusual varieties that grow well in your planting zone.
8) Exchanging clippings of perennials with friends inexpensively adds plants like strawberries, scallions and mint to your garden.
Let squash crawl up trellises or they'll take over your garden! This pumpkin reseeded itself from one tossed out last year. |
10) Starting late in the growing season is fine. Some crops, like garlic, can be planted in the fall. Plywood frames for raised beds can be assembled over winter, and indoor composting systems even allow all-year composting.
11) Following good composting techniques will heat your pile internally and kill weed seeds, so you won’t be sowing weeds with your veggie seeds.
12) Taking time to enjoy the garden makes all your effort worthwhile. Put a chair there and a little table for your mug of coffee or tea, and bask in your garden’s beauty, preferably early morning when the “dew is still on the roses,” or in the golden glow of dusk. Even a five-minute visit before or after the day’s work, is rejuvenating.
13) Weeding ten minutes daily keeps maintenance under control.
14) Involving children in planting and planning beds, even if gardening isn’t their “thing,” helps them develop a good work ethic. As part of the household, they should contribute a fair share in the production and harvesting of fresh food for the table. Who knows? Some day they may even continue the gardening tradition within their own families.
Love the post. You have laid out such a beautiful invitation for us to get growing. If Jesus hadn't been a carpenter I feel sure he would have landed himself in a farmer's family. He could dig his hands into his own handmade dirt and watched all of his inventions sprout forth.
ReplyDeleteAwesome garden! I love the St. Francis statue!
ReplyDeleteNice work, Marianna! Lots of great suggestions.
ReplyDeleteJust saw this mulching tip from "The Friends of Burlington Gardens and the Vermont Community Garden Network" website: "Avoid using bark mulch, sawdust, or woodchips as mulch in a vegetable garden as these mulches tend to bind nitrogen from the soil. Apply grass, hay, or straw mulch in early summer after weeding your garden thoroughly and when the soil is moist following a steady rain." Unfortunately, I happen to be allergic to grass, hay or straw clippings. Mmmm. Anyone have any other suggestions?!
ReplyDeleteRake up your deciduous leaves in the fall, bag them up in large garbage bags when they are dry, and they will keep through the following summer. These can be used for mulch either in walkways or tucked around plants or on top of potatoes as they grow (to keep light from turning them green/poisonous).
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWas thinking today about gardening buddies, and how they really make for successful gardening. I grew up with an organic garden, but as an adult, it's
ReplyDeletea huge boon knowing other knowledgeable gardeners. They're always teaching me something new! My sister-in-law has a fabulous garden, always shares great ideas and clippings and grows the most astonishingly huge tomato plants in the house season-round. (She puts the pots on castors and rolls them around to the sunny windows.) Seeing her raised bed gardens year in, year out, made me receptive to trying it out when a friend mentioned the Mel Bartholomew Square Foot Gardening method. Another friend is researching all sorts of regional varieties and turning her back yard into an interesting retreat featuring native plants. You all inspire me!