Jill...when I see my climbing roses blooming this year, I think of you and how your post on pegging roses really inspired me to 'do something' with my roses...several of them are nicely pegged and blooming or budding better than ever before. I hope to write a blog later about your instructions and my results with roses..thanks for teaching me something... Mona
This is my first visit to your blog and I absolutely LOVE your previous post! I've been thinking of adding a goat to our menagerie in Washington State.
Hi Carol, welcome! We are really enjoying the goats. Fresh milk everyday(when it's out turn to have them) and they are small enough to fit nicely with the rest of the animals on our urban farm!
My husband and I have been gardening for many years, not so much for the food security, but for the beauty, satisfaction, and peace that gardening and growing things bring you. We started small, a couple of tomatoes, a few zucchini, and lots of flowers. It didn't really matter how much we harvested. We really didn't eat from our garden. We didn't know how. The lettuce was always a little bitter . The tomatoes always had holes in them and there was a Safeway just down the street. The important thing was that we were having fun. We loved working together with our children beside us. There is something comforting about watching your kids play in the dirt or happily run down the brick paths with nowhere to go. Our garden was the center of the earth ,we were firmly planted there and that was all that mattered. A couple of years ago, something important started to take place. A shift began to take shape, not only to us , but to our communities. The meaning of food began to change. Where the food came from, what was in it and how it nourishes us. Perhaps the connection between what we eat and how we feel finally began to set in. For us, it was time to get serious. It was time to eat from our garden.
All photo's are mine, unless otherwise stated. Please contact me at jill@sweetlifegarden.com for use permission. If you'd like to share on your blog, please link back to my site. Thank you!
" I am a mad gardener. I mutter and rant, and at night I shake dry seeds out of my unruly mane of hair. The garden is in my bones, in my gut, and in my hands. "
Wendy Johnson , Gardening at the Dragons Gate
"All through the long winter, I dream of my garden. On the first day of spring, I dig my fingers into the soft earth. I can feel its energy, and my spirit soars." Helen Hayes
Inch by inch, row by row Gonna make this garden grow Gonna mulch it deep and low Gonna make it furtile ground
Inch by inch, row by row Please bless these seeds I sow Please keep them safe below 'Till the rain comes tumbling down
Pullin' weeds and pickin' stones We are made of dreams and bones Need a place to call my own 'Cause the time is close at hand
Grain for grain, sun and rain Find my way in nature's chain Tune my body and my brain To the music of the land
Chorus
Plant your rows straight and long Season them with prayer and song Mother Earth will make you strong If you give her love and care An old crow watches hungrily from his perch on younder tree In my garden I'm as free as that feathered bird up there
8 comments:
what a beautiful picture!
Blessings, and Happy Easter!
Joanne
What a pretty blue egg. Happy Easter to you as well.
@ 3Beeze Homestead
Happy (a day late) Easter to you!
Thank you girls! It's the best time of year!
Jill...when I see my climbing roses blooming this year, I think of you and how your post on pegging roses really inspired me to 'do something' with my roses...several of them are nicely pegged and blooming or budding better than ever before. I hope to write a blog later about your instructions and my results with roses..thanks for teaching me something...
Mona
Hi Mona! I am so happy to hear about your pegging adventure! I thought it was amazing when I first figured it out too! Can't wait to see your results!
Meaningful picture!
This is my first visit to your blog and I absolutely LOVE your previous post! I've been thinking of adding a goat to our menagerie in Washington State.
Hi Carol, welcome! We are really enjoying the goats. Fresh milk everyday(when it's out turn to have them) and they are small enough to fit nicely with the rest of the animals on our urban farm!
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