Category: How Things Grow

  • The Fairest of Them All?

    DewySnapPea

    Picking produce early in the morning for market is a joy. Is there anything more tranquil or beautiful than a snap pea covered with dew? Maybe a squash flower opening at dawn? Or an onion in full bloom? Perhaps the savoy cabbage is the fairest of them all.

    SquashFlower
    OnionFlower
    SavoyCabbage

  • Grow Them for Their Flowers

    RadishFlowers

    Radishes are worth growing for their delicate, butterfly-like flowers. Some radishes have white flowers and others pink or lavender. You could have a wedding and use nothing but vegetable flowers. Huge bouquets of carrot flowers would steal the show for sure. The dogs aren’t impressed with radish flowers. They aren’t impressed with me digging up potatoes either.

    DogsInTheGarden
    Potatoes20Pounds

    I’m happy with the potatoes I dug up today, and hopefully plenty of people will be happy with them too at Bow Little Market tomorrow.

  • Autumn Already?

    Dry Leaves

    It’s only the end of July and the red alders are starting to drop some leaves. Trees can produce more leaves in the spring than they can support when it gets hot and dry during the summer. And so the extra leaves fall.

    Dry Leaves in Wheelbarrow

  • The Miracles We Eat

    Onions

    It’s early in the morning and I’m cleaning the onions I just pulled out of the ground for today’s Bow Little Market. How do onions do it? How do they make all those thin layers without them sticking together? How do they make that last thin skin? With what fine brush do they paint the thin green lines on their white flesh? And they do it all without any hands. You need to be a gardner, a farmer with their hands in the dirt, to be full of joy and wonder at what a special place we live in this infinite universe.

    We’ve sent Voyager more than 20 billion kilometers from earth. We’ve peered far into distant galaxies, and we’ve yet to find another home where onions grow. Our precious earth is a treasure beyond compare. Making sure that for generations to come, people can wonder how an onion grows is something we owe our children, our grandchildren, our great grandchildren, and on and on and on. Nothing is more important than pure air, clean water, soil free of poisons and teaming with life. It’s what keeps us alive and happy.

    Potatoes
    Tomatoes

  • Pink and Fuzzy

    PinkAndFuzzyC

    What is pink and fuzzy in a summer garden? Mint in bloom. In a moist climate like here in the Pacific Northwest, mint will grow and spread with wild abandonment. If you want just a little keep it in a pot. It is such a vigorous grower that you can use it to make low hedges. No matter how many times you trim it, mint will spring back quickly.

    This is mentha suaveolens, also called apple mint, pineapple mint, woolly mint or round-leafed mint.

    PinkAndFuzzyB
    PinkAndFuzzyA