Posts tagged Homegrown
Spring Garden Notes
 
If you wish to make anything grow, you must understand it, and understand it in a very real sense. ‘Green fingers’ are a fact, and a mystery only to the unpracticed. But green fingers are the extensions of a verdant heart.
— Russell Page, The Education of a Gardener
 

I've been dreaming of growing our Spring garden since we moved to our new home in November for several reasons— as a creature of habit, I feel lost and idle without a garden to tend to, and the girls seem uninterested in spending time in a backyard with just a lawn of grass. In every home we’ve moved into its been my top priority to add our personal touch and color to the landscape; and if there isn’t a garden, we grow one. These past few months have been somewhat of a slow process.

Ultimately, the garden is the heart of our homeschool life. No matter how big or small, it provides us many moments of education in leisure and in class hours. In the primer years, I invest a lot of time teaching the girls how to grow their own herbs, flowers, and vegetables from seed, They also learn how to take notes of their observations and illustrate our kitchen garden's slow changes throughout the seasons.

x jena

 
 

photos & garden notes


01/05 Sandie, Leia, and Ema helped to sow the first seeds of the new year to jumpstart our spring garden. Ideally we would be using terracotta pots, but instead, we are using reusable seed trays and plastic pots from my parent’s house.

01/16 This unused space was truly an answered prayer. It replaced the 4 cedar garden beds my husband built in California with Evie, which we sold to someone before we left.

02/12 Once I pulled out the weeds and amended the soil in February, I transplanted the seedlings into the beds. I bought marigolds, lavender, mint, sage, basil and rosemary seedlings from the store to fill the beds in; and also transplanted chives my mom was growing at her house. We had experienced significant rain, but thankfully the bed had excellent drainage. However, all seedlings showed signs of poor growth with little to no sunlight during those months.

03/05 Snails and slugs have already caused a lot of destruction in the beds over the last month— the marigolds, zinnias, and rows of collards and kale (on both sides of the row of arugula) have been devoured.

03/13 Sandie measures the growth of our plants and records it in her nature journal.

03/05 Approximately two dozen Giant Cactus Zinnias were planted in this tray, but 1/4 of the seedlings vanished overnight.

3/05 Chamomile sprouting
4/24 Once I transplanted it along the border of the garden bed, gastropods had a feast.

3/20 Lupine
4/24 Majority of the lupine got eaten after being transplanted into the garden bed.

3/20 Rows of seedings (lacinto kale, collard greens, marigolds, and ruby red chard planted alongside the arugula) keep getting devoured after every succession planting.

3/29 Planted a row of chives in the back to deter pests, and thyme in front for texture and ground cover. This area should be full of a dozen zinnia plants, but more than half has been eaten up.

3/29 Kale sprouting between a row of arugula and chives.
4/24 No luck in kale seedlings when direct sown into beds. Every succession has been devoured by pests. However, the arugula still stands and the chives are growing wonderfully!

3/29 Morning routine.

4/03 April showers and the view from my work desk.

4/3 Trellis for Dwarf Sugar Peas

4/6 Leia playing in the Resurrection Garden.

4/10 Dill is always better freshly picked!

4/10 Ema’s Easter Resurrection Garden, turned into a little home for her figurines.

4/10 Beet seedlings covered with a repurposed plastic egg tray to protect it from snails. Crushed egg shells also line the front of the bed.

4/22 Dwarf Sugar Snap Peas flowering

4/24 Cilantro flowering near basil and dill

4/24 Morning duties before the rain clouds rolled in on a perfect gardening day.

 
A Moral Garden
 

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The principal value of a private garden is not understood. It is not to give the possessor vegetables or fruit (that can be better and cheaper done by the market-gardeners), but to teach him patience and philosophy and the higher virtues, hope deferred and expectations blighted, leading directly to resignation and sometimes to alienation. The garden thus becomes a moral agent, a test of character, as it was in the beginning. I shall keep this central truth in mind in these articles. I mean to have a moral garden, if it is not a productive one,—one that shall teach, O my brothers! O my sisters! the great lessons of life.
— Charles Dudley Warner. "Summer in a garden, and calvin, a study of character: First Week", 1870.
 
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After many years of gardening through the seasons in southern California, I can attest to one thing: you reap what you sow in gardening and motherhood. The labor of a gardener is not so simple, and neither are the duties of a mother. Interestingly, the more knowledge I’ve gained through growing our food, the more I’ve witnessed the parallels in raising children. The garden secretly holds such valuable wisdom through the labor of our hands. From seed to harvest, one of many moral virtues it teaches us is patience—  how to wait with gratitude and to intentionally slow down as we wait for the fruit to ripen. It also teaches us that neglect in the garden can result in a poor harvest.

The more attentive I am to how our plants grow— Does the soil need more nitrogen? Is this specific plant getting too much sunlight or too much water? Do I need to move this plant to a bigger pot?— the healthier our garden grows. I remember one year during the heat of Summer, one of our zucchini plants succumbed to powdery mildew— also known as blight—on its leaves. After a few weeks of avoiding the problem, I looked from the bedroom window and saw the disease spread from one plant to the other, including our beautiful cosmos and morning glory vine along our fence. Not only did I become even more discouraged, but I also gave up on our garden throughout the summer. Neglect led to more damage than I anticipated and more work in the long run; it was a moral lesson to me that the same goes for what happens within the walls of our homes, minds, bodies, and hearts.

Do not despise these small beginnings,for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin.
— Zechariah 4:10

These pictures show our flourishing 2020 spring garden in our Clairemont home in San Diego. I had learned my lesson as a gardener. We had a bountiful harvest that year and a healthy homeschool that reaped the benefits of having a daily routine and aiming for small victories through small beginnings. Whether it was reading a chapter a day or fixing a bad habit, I believe we overcame so much just by caring enough for what we love.

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ONIONS
ZUCCHINI
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KALE
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CILANTRO — flowering dainty white blossoms.
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SPRING/SUMMER 2020 NOTES

MARCHspring seeds

Vegetables: Chinese Cabbage, Radishes, Beets, Zucchini, Cherry Tomatoes, Spinach, Swiss Chard, Carrots, Green Onions, Sugar Peas, and Peas.

Herbs: Chives, Cilantro, Basil, Dill

Flowers: French Marigolds, Benjamin Buttons, Zinnias, Assylum, Cosmos, and Hollyhock.

Results: The only seeds that did not germinate were the Chives.

JULYsummer seeds

Vegetables: Cucumbers, Okra, Pumpkin, Rainbow Chard, a variety of tomatoes, and more Zucchini.

Flowers: Sunflower, Morning Glory

Results: The summer heat killed the Zinnias and Benjamin Buttons, so we decided to grow more Zinnias and plant them in a partial sunny area. We also planted a dozen Sunflower seeds, but only 4 plants survived. A pest (squirrel or rat) would munch the head of the seedlings once they grew to about 3”.

AUGUSTlate summer

I took a break from tending to the garden because I needed to prepare for our school year, which began on August 17th. Ripe vegetables would be harvested, plants were watered daily or every other day because I just didn't have the time, my husband managed our compost; and once a week, I would prune the plants, the girls would dead-head the flowers, and we'd spend a minimal amount of time pulling weeds. Caterpillars are getting the most of our greens, but at least it's a sign that our potager is thriving with life!

SEPTEMBERalmost fall

The days have been too hot to start planting anything right now, so we continue to water and harvest what remains.

x jena