the montra

Everybody who can should have a garden... it puts one in touch with the natural living world. Gardening is not a competition, but if it can be turned into one to help get a greater yield, then do it.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Robertson's Almanac

I believe i was eating grapes from our front garden on September 20th last year.  This is the garden that Fire-Man and I smashed out of some concrete that was there before.  Imagine somebody thinking it would be a good idea to pour concrete in a perfectly suitable, if not optimal gardening space that I would one day occupy. It's not the first time i smashed concrete out of a fine garden spot, and given the amount of concrete in this world i doubt it to be the last.

Anyhoo... i was eating grapes today, a full month before last year.   They are very tasty grapes by the way, but they are a month early... this is what a steady summer of "blast furnace" weather will do to the plants... provided they are watered properly.   I believe i noted earlier in another post about how my beets that overwintered were suffering the signs of drought in April.  Imagine drought in April in the pacific Northwest... just a minor fee we pay to keep our awesome economy rolling along. I read a story about somebody harvesting bananas in Vancouver B.C, don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of fresh bananas but this has got to be a bit weird.  Yes it is weird but remember, weird is the new cool so in effect we are collectively killing it, until of course the glaciers all melt and there is no water, but I'm sure that is they type of thing that "nobody could have ever imagined", except of course the lunatics that have been screaming about it trying to threaten our economy that is doing so well for all citizens.

Now Robertson's Alminac is more of a undocumented recollection of things i have observed than a detailed quantitative study, but I'm smart you see... why waste time with detailed quantitative studies when they are dismissed as "alarmist" and countered successfully with tested "talking points".

I think i was part of the Jim Bailie Bird-a-thon in 1982.  I believe i saw 143 species of birds in one day during the spring migration at Point Pelee National Park.  The years following there were less and less birds until the point where it became depressing and i stopped going.  Apparently the culprit at that time was the rapid destruction of the Amazon Rain forest where our songbirds wintered and the loss of habitat was responsible for the decline in bird species.  Insane to think that that was over 30 years ago and we still are arguing about the idea of human activity affecting the planet that we need completely to survive on.

But hey do i got Tomatoes... I got Tomatoes... they are fantastic tomatoes. I'm thinking including the cherry type tomatoes i probably have about 500 ripe at this point in time.  Last year i was canning like a maniac late into the night heating the house up with the boiling pot raging... i needed to know it could be done and how to do it.  This year i am spreading goodwill among the neighbours, and saving myself the workload of canning something i can buy for a buck a can.  Mind you i make a pretty killer tomato soup and that can be frozen and saved for a cold November dinner.

I planted a melon in July to take over the pea trellis before i left on vacation for a few weeks... it was a long shot but after holding off putting tomatoes in the ground thinking there might be a cold spell  i thought  why not... the thing is now a monster thanks to Josh's dutiful watering with many fruit almost ready.  My key problem here is that this is at the community garden and i am noticing signs of powdery mildew on many of the neglected "cucurbitia" plants in the garden.  This will spread like wild fire and might strike me down before the harvest is complete.  In a moment of inspired genius i almost pulled all of the powdery mildew plants out of the garden, but then remembering the concept of "community" i got cold feet.  Somebody might get offended by me robbing them of their diseased plant that might produce some food that they will let rot in the ground... don't want to step on any toes.

Likewise a month ago i pulled out all of my cabbage related plants due to severe whitefly infestation... and i fired in some beans.  The beans are now stomping balls in the garden space. It's amazing how many beans a single plant can produce and the lesson i see is to give each bean plant more space.   I believe i have said it before and in this extreme year it is even more apparent that "Portland is a bean and Tomato town".

I think I'll stop growing hops now that i have my neighbours growing them for me... it's the zucchini argument.  Why grow something that somebody else will grow, get too many and try to give you?... there is no lack of free zucchini or hops in my world... another piece of life advice, always live in the world that suits you.

So we are a month ahead and there still might be plenty of growing season ahead of us... are your plants ready?  Now is the time you need to start culling the disease... let your horses run into the latter part of the season.  If a plant is doing well let it roll, keep your tomatoes off the ground,  prune back the excess and keep the plant healthy... you might get another month of solid production.

Onions... i have about 9 bags of onions from my bumper crop earlier this year, some i let got to seed for the bees.  Now it looks like onion seed will be scattered all around the garden.  This shall be a neat experiment seeing that i bought onion starts this year.... will onions come up naturally next year?  Time is the hunter and it will show the truth.   For the record all of my beans are saved seeds, i just saved some pods from last year and planted.  It's the weird thing about gardening, people take master gardening courses and then head to the nursery to buy plants... all plants can be propagated by plants themselves, but yet we need plant stores.

It's not to weird, it's the new normal.




Saturday, June 20, 2015

Buzzing


Getting a beehive is a perfect accelerator for an insane maniac's changing local view.   Bee's make honey yes, but we don't actually eat a lot of honey... clearly that will change, but i secured bee's for pollinating, intrigue and motivation.

Once you have a hive you see the world differently... every where you go you are looking for bees, and more importantly what they are attracted to... and then why.  Bee's need pollen (protein) and they need nectar (carbohydrate)... they need a source of this throughout the year.  Obviously there are plants that provide this throughout the season, and clearly one wants to assure a quantity of this at all times.

I'll give you an example... Mint, I hated it...  it ran wild on my property before we got here and i set it eradicating it with a religious like fever.  I believe i might have even gone on last year about how some mentally impaired person brought some into the community garden... a plant clearly on the list of "do not plant ... invasive species" in the garden handbook.   But then I find out that mint, when it flowers in the fall is a good source of food for the bee's... my small mind opens up a bit and i change the way i see things.  Was that me watering some mint that came up in my garden? ... yes it was... you see what is happening here.

In fact this whole beekeeping thing might be good for my marriage... I have been importing bee balm, and lavender and other flowering plants that i am allergic to.  You see "the old me" had this opinion that if you couldn't eat the plant there was no use planting it, and my wife is kind of a "flowers are nice to look at and have around" kind of girl.  Now through the bees i can see this new love of flowers... perhaps i am obsessed.

Did you know that honey from rhododendrons is poisonous?  I didn't, but this is what i found out doing my research... so i set straight to work cutting down my neighbours rhododendron bush... she came rushing out of the house kind of vibrating and was cutting all over the place in animated fashion and at the time i was in the mindset that she was doing a bee dance to try and tell me in "bee language" where other rhododendrons were so we could set to work on more eradication.  I figured she was wagging to the left of the sun so i tried to rub antennae with her and i set off to the left of the sun to find other offending rhododendron bushes.  It turns out that wasn't the case and she seemed more pro rhododendron even after finding out about the honey.  She might even be a bit mad at me even though i offered to replant her yard in mint and lavender... some people you just can't please them.

OK maybe that didn't happen, but it's the type of thoughts i have been having lately.  My cousin called the other day to tell me he bought a new car and was very excited about it... I asked him if there were any bee's in it... i sensed alarm and a mild paranoia mixed with a fleeting sense that he hoped that there were no bees in it, and perhaps he should go check to be sure... it really knocked him off topic in a confused kind of way.

 Honey from fuchsia is insipid i have read. Oddly enough I had always like fuchsia's... my parents had them at the cottage and the hummingbirds would come and feed on them and there were good memories... memories that i had mentioned to my wife, who this year bought two hanging baskets of fuchsia, and i went out and bought clips and chains to hang on our front porch... and now the idea of insipid honey threatens to destroy that dream.   In reality I'm sure a few fuchsia flowers will not sour a honey batch... it's the thing about urban beekeeping... you get averages.  The good thing about urban beekeeping is there are less pesticides in the city and a great variety of flowering plants, although i did notice some hammerhead spraying the sidewalk with round-up, and i tried a more diplomatic approach in an effort to curb this insane behaviour... it didn't work.  A sick human determined to pour chemicals on his land in order to conquer the landscape to make it a more consumer driven idea of what a yard should look like is no match for logic.

My oldest daughter has now dubbed herself a "honey detective" furrowing her brow at rhododendron bushes and planting a large mass of sunflower starts.  Our plan is to gorilla garden as many sunflowers in the neighbourhood as possible.  Of course sunflowers are a good source of late season food for the bees.  I figure if i send the kids door to door asking to plant a sunflower or 200 in somebodies yard they will get a better response... use the resources you have always.


I have a bunch of flowering onions... if you overwinter onions they will then go to seed this time of year... I always let a few go for the bees and it looks kind of nice in the garden.  Interesting fact... leek flowers are purple (at least the kind i have) while red onion flowers are white... who would have known?

The other crazy amazing thing about bee's is what they accomplish with steady work.  Gardening can seem overwhelming if you visit your garden infrequently in rushed bursts of time... even me who is always in the garden I find myself saying to myself "there is so much i could do.. how far do i go?".  I of course am a person who sees gardening as more of a religion in a way that i can only guess religious people practice religion.  Practice is a good word... a defined allotment of time in which you focus on doing the work you need to get done, and in the end you feel better and see the world in a better way.  Well of course the bee's are the stalwarts of practice... it's all they do... make wax comb, fill it with brood, pollen and honey and work constantly to enhance the hive.  You see what the bee's do in a week of steady work and you can't help but feel humbled by the progress.  Do you know how bee's make honey? Check this ... if it was marketed as double regurgitated stinging insect serum it might not sell... but don't let the truth get in the way of a fine toast garnish.

I get an immense amount of good feeling nurturing food grown in the ground, it puts me in touch with the natural planet... my other "religious like" devotion.  Hiking a mountain, walking the forest, on a canoe on a lake, standing in a river... birdwatching trips with my Dad, camping in Algonquin park and hearing the wolves howl one night. All of the special memories that are "spiritual",  are nature related my whole life.  So somebody asked me... Is having bees labor intensive? Because they were thinking they would  like to do it if it wasn't labor intensive.  Now the answer of course is Yes, it is labor intensive, like gardening is labor intensive.  I would change the word "labor" to "opportunity" and the sentence takes on a whole new meaning... it turns from a negative to a positive pretty quickly.  If i can find something to help give positive meaning to life, something i can practice that gives back so much in so many different ways, then labor is not the word i use... i use opportunity.  In fact the other night at dinner where we fed heavily from the garden one of my daughters reminded me of the time i received notice that i got the community gardening plot.  The story goes that my wife was upstairs reading stories (it was bedtime) and i started screaming and making a lot of noise... My wife sent a girl down to find out what the problem was and in fact i was just celebrating the opportunity i had been awarded for more gardening space.

Imagine if i didn't have the community garden? That's where the twins learned to bike to last summer...  imagine not having that goal? Imagine not knowing all the new people i have met?  I wouldn't have seen a few great films because i didn't know about them... i wouldn't have have found homes for my excess plants? There would be less victims for my sunflower population project... right... we haven't forgotten about the bees... let's not get too off topic.   Life has a strange way of coming full circle... bad news can be good news if your focus on the end goal stays paramount. If something bad happens there is probably a reason, and so rather than dwell on the bad thing you can focus on the big picture to work to alter the chances of that "bad thing" happening again.

I'll leave you with a story i read a long time ago... not sure where it came from, but it helped reinforce my beliefs at a time when they were wavering:

A farmer left a gate open one night and one of his horses got out and escaped.  When the neighbour heard he said "this is bad", the farmer said "we will see".  The next day the horse came back with 3 wild horses, the neighbour said "this is good", the farmer said "we will see".  The next day the farmers son tried to break the wild horses and was thrown to the ground breaking his leg, the neighbour said "this is bad", the farmer said "we will see".  The next day the King's men cam by to collect the young men to go and fight in a far off war, and the farmers son couldn't go because he had a broken leg...

Life's decisions sometimes take a longer time to show their value, as we are seeing with the insane consequences of the money profit driven world... that's why I'll always ensconce myself with the gardeners and the beekeepers.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

It's June... where is your garden at?

I know it's old hat, but I'm gonna say it again... Gardening is not a competition, but if it can be turned into one to give yourself a yield boost, well then that's an advantage one should seriously look at.

Another advantage is a honeybee hive, and a colony of mason bees and the dogged determination to get out there and pollinate with a hand device if your observations lead to to believe you might be exposed to a weakness in the food growth cycle.


Here in the spring i am pollinating a plum tree with a cue tip.  The cue tip was kind of thrashing at the flowers as the cotton fibers rip at the stigma and stamen  kind of damaging it.  Obviously you are getting pollen however but i also tried using a flower to pollinate other flowers.  In the end I have plenty of fruit on the tree which is sure to leave me in a nice fine rage when the squirrels bite off all the fruit a week before they are ripe.  Don't think there won't be a war over this... Old Man Robertson will throw everything he has to respond and put an end to this wretched habit the local squirrels are accustomed to getting away with.  It's one of the problems of being aware of things... it can be a curse sometimes... might be kind of nice to be able to just show up smiling happy in the thought that you are a gardener, because you have a garden and it's so nice and fun and relaxing.  Maybe you show up smiling up at the sky because it's a beautiful day and then you look down and see... "Oh something is eating my food", and then think "oh well better luck next year".

Not me... i drive my ships home or i go down with them.  If you fail to solve your problems in your garden you run the risk getting in the habit of failing in other aspects in life.  "I don't feel like watering today on this hot day because i am kind of busy" can be akin to "i don't feel like making the effort today to make this day awesome". 

I really believe routine menial labor splashed with a dash of observation is one of the great inherent resets for the human brain... now i haven't done any scientific studies on this, but then why bother... we don't listen to science... we are more of a "wing it" with respect to personal beliefs and economic opportunities kind of species.  I believe the name of the species is "Consumers"... But lets not get on that tangent lest we slip onto the wrong side of this razor wire.

On a more positive note it was a good slug killing day.  Because it was rainy and cloudy today and the slugs were out on the spinach in the daytime thinking it was free buffet day... it turned out to be dead slug day.  It's important to take advantage of these opportunities when they are presented to you... that way you don't have to be out in the garden with a headlamp at midnight catching in action the things that you see the evidence of during the day. 

So right, our observation skills noticed a lack of pollinators so we set the tone and took care of business... it was kind of an early spring this year, surly due to factors nobody can explain and will require much greater study in the future in order to craft smart governmental policies that balance the needs of consumers and business alike. So when going gets weird, the weird need to turn pro... great and fitting advise from the late great HST.  Even though i was set with a mason bee colony the mason bees didn't hatch until the fruit tree flowering was half over.  We shall see what the honeybees can do next year.

Blogging time is up... me schedule calls for yoga... stay tuned for the next installment where our hero discusses some of the positive idea sharing things that have happened at the community garden this year. 

Have a good night and remember to let all your seeds grow into their opportunities you give them.



Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Early Spring 2015

   I realize I am courting the Omens by titling a post "early spring" and in fact may be challenging fate to deliver an ice storm... but every once in a while one has to live dangerously.  The crazy thing is that the garden has had a bit of a problem with drought this spring... not a good sign for the long hot summer coming up in this part of the Pacific Northwest.  Who would have ever thought we could end up having water problems?  Well lots of people actually, but those are the tree hugging fools that thought that ecosystems should be protected... we don't listen to those loons with their wacky, baseless, social media sharing, Domesday scenarios constructed to destroy the economy.

In the end I'll have enough water to soak my gardens, so it won't be a problem for me in the near future, so as a human i will subscribe to the age old "if it doesn't immediately affect me personally then it's not a problem" and carry on.  Heck my toilet is full of drinking water... it can't be a problem right.

So the kale is flowering, I let it go for a bit to give the bees the idea that my garden is a good place to hang, but i took it down today to cut down on the lingering white fly problem we have in this city.  I juiced the leaves with carrots and beets that overwintered and some ginger that i bought from the store and then i nursed a belly ache for a while belching like a town drunk.  I feel fine now... wondering if bolting kale is good for the digestive tract?  The little yellow flowers were very sweet and peppery and added wonderful colour to my salad.  It is now time to put some new kale in the garden that i started indoors a little while back.  I guess i have a love/hate relationship with kale... it's kind of more of a hate/hate relationship, but it's apparently really good for you so i eat it.  A good little recipe is to fry it in garlic, butter, salt and pepper and get some chick peas in there and toast them good.  With enough butter and salt even the most insipid tasting plants can be delicious.

 Kale grows easy like a weed and a half dozen plants will give you all you need all year round... just keep grabbing leaves and it will pump out more.  Another good thing is that the idiot squirrels don't eat Kale in this hood... they will destroy broccoli and beets, attack chard, decimate fruit trees, but they won't eat kale.  Luckily i can grow beets and broccoli and berries in the community garden as pesky squirrels aren't a big problem over there.

Kale salad-  wash the leaves real good, stack them together and roll them up real tight and then with a nice knife slice it real thin cutting circle sections.  This will give you long thin strands and rub with some oil and salt and let sit for an hour or longer.  You can add orange slices or nuts, cheese... anything really.  Bring that to a dinner party and the ladies will be amazed... for some reason everybody likes to coo over a kale salad... it provides a perfect decoy for you to hit the cheese plate somebody else brought.

need it on video-


When you are ready I'll tell you how to make kale chips... but for now make sure you get rid of the kale that is in your garden that over wintered now.  Don't fall into the trap where you think it is food that you are going to eat... you may, but more importantly it is a disease source that will haunt your garden and your neighbours gardens for the duration of the season.  It's one of those mistakes that is made by the same people year after year... the joys of community.

Peas should be in... don't have them in yet? Give yourself a little punch in the face... just a little stinger and make sure to hit above the eye in the forehead... trust me...  don't hit your eye... Just a little shot to wake yourself up to get into the game.  Spinach should be rolling too... forgot that?  Give yourself a little kick in the shin... make sure not to twist your knee...  you can kind of heel kick it so you get the little motivational shot of pain without risking long term damage. 

Obviously if you just want to garden then go do it... but if you want to MAN Garden then you need to be prepared to hold yourself accountable.  Don't be afraid to self loath as a motivator... i do realize promoting self loathing seems ironic in a hobby that is generally considered a peaceful and relaxing endeavor... but you have to see the garden through the plants.  If you are soft on yourself you can always find an excuse, a reason... imagine your garden as a sports team and you are the GM.  You need to be hard to set the example that this is going to be a grinding season with no days taken off... no set of conditions too steep to overcome victory.  What is victory you ask shaking your head?  Produce of course... some of the gardens out there already have eating spinach and foot high peas... some gardens have nothing but a pile of weeds.  The way i see it, the spinach eating garden is off to a 20 point lead early in the season... those are going to be big points to make up to get into the playoffs come harvest season. 



 

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Notes from November volume I

"My roots I'll never forget, I'll always remember the road i traveled"
     - Burning Spear

I like leaf raking, and I'm glad we have a maple tree, the whole process puts me in touch with my roots.  In previous years i have dug them in, like my father did,  but this year i am going to try to compost them in a pile.  Might it be a ground cover/ fertilizer, or will today's hurricane winds prove my plan to be folly?  I put straw over other layers of the leaves, it's just that i took this picture after a few loads of fresh leaves.  Leaf raking is a good way to maintain a seasonal dominance over your living surroundings, don't be beaten down over "work you have to do" just do it and reap the rewards.  It feels good to also use things on site for other purposes.  If i wanted to be modern i could just leaf blow all my crap onto the street and have the city pick it up for 15 dollars.  Of course living in the U.S.A an honest citizen can opt out of paying this insane "tax" and clean up the leaves myself.  Imagine the idea of some Governmental wing trying to gouge me for 15 big ones, and at the same time rob me of my god given free organic soil amendment. 

It's now that i start to eyeball the neighbors leaf supply... my father in me says it would be a good time to get more organic material for my soil, to help break up the clay, and provide extra nutrients.  If they land on the street i get them fast because of course i am paranoid about importing toxic road compounds.  If they stay on the street for a bit and get wet, i file them into the yard waste container that can deal with a small amount of leaves.

Dad and I use to drive around the the local streets and pick up bags of leaves, like midnight robbers... until that unfortunate time we imported some new weeds... lesson learned, always know the contents of the stuff you compost in your garden.  Again; don't compost your old diseased garden plants IN YOUR GARDEN... it is best to get that disease out of the garden... let the city deal with that stuff... that's what tax dollars are for.


And here is another photo of the oven... but what does it have to do with gardening?  Well a couple points... 1) it's kind of awesome, so it's doesn't really need to be on topic... it's mere existence becomes the topic and super cedes any other topic by default. 2) It's out by the garden, which is more incentive to get out to the garden to bask in the glow of the oven. 3) you could even gloat more by drawing a parallel between using your leaves on site, and using your clay on site. 4) who cares about a stupid garden if we are thinking about firing an oven...

Where was I... i was composting leaves, then i started dreaming about ovens, then i had to eat a bagel... and then i started dissing gardens...

But seriously the garden is life, much like the Ocean... on a roll here.  You have to respect the garden... every season gives the opportunity to "load the spring" for maximum harvest.  A garden is not something  that plays a "2 season game"... we live in a world with 4 seasons, and just because some bearded mouth breather wakes up on a warm spring day and dreams he'd like to be a gardener, that doesn't mean the garden wasn't there for the past half year. 

The garden that brings people together, keeps people together... social living is the best.





Saturday, October 18, 2014

Let's go over some failures

Failure:  omission of occurrence or performance.

 Why are the carrot bottoms curving upwards?  Using basic science (i know crazy stuff), i theorize that due to a lack of proper deep ground soaking the carrots had to turn up to get water, because the jackass that runs the operation let the soil dry out and then only watered sufficiently so that the top 3-4 inches of soil got moist.  True they were planted in raised beds, so are more suspect to losing water, but i am aware of these facts... i should do better and not fail. 
 And in figure 2 we see a hooked carrot, a proper carrot and 2 short fat stubby carrots... it would be interesting to see why the short fat stubby ones went that direction, but i suspect it might have to do with the timing of the drought, perhaps a clay pocket, or maybe light.  Soak your soil good so the carrots reach down for the water... a sandier soil works well!

It should be noted that this was my second crop of carrots for the year so they were very young when the hot dry summer came.

A quick note on failure... don't be a wuss and recoil at the negative connotations associated with the word.  Failure is great, one of the finest learning tools in the book, but it is only a learning tool if you face it and look into it's jaws to see where the beast ran wild.  Shutting off in an emotional cocoon upon the mention of the word will only ensure you will meet the same fate again down the road, and perhaps even worse, you may assign a different reason, a wrong reason taking you further off the path of righteousness and spiritual happiness.   I could be a fool and say that the seeds were no good and i got them at this nursery that i thought was a bit suspect so I'm not going to get seeds from that place again cause look what happened.   You can see how not properly dealing with failure can steer you way off course... so don't do it... everybody fails... it makes the successes all the more sweeter... gardening is not about looking good... it's about eating well, and sometimes you have to drink a cup of failure to help the meal go down.


 Figure 3: Is that a baby corn and a stunted white fly breeding ground of a Kale plant?  Hint, there was a large tomato plant in the cage there... those plants got no light and hence produced nothing but weak plants serving as pest cultivation sites.  Bottom line... it probably would have been better to have no plants than those plants.  I did hope the corn would shoot up high over the tomato but obviously it didn't make it... the ones a few feet over were about 10 feet tall... just didn't get that early critical sun to give it the power to escape the shadow.  


Yep it's time to put the garden into a new phase... you have to get stuff out so you can get your garlic in. You can leave some if you are really getting food (lots of Kale), but the tomatoes are not as fine as they were back in august... blight and mold are establishing colonies in your soil... time to cut the loses.  You need to put that garden to sleep, let it rest and don't compost your blight laden or powdery mildew abundant green matter into your garden... that's why God created city green bins... i believe they should have the heat to kill the spores, or at least apply the NIMBY phenomenon (not in my backyard).   Over the past few years i have been observing various gardens and it seems that the ones that fail to remove diseased plants over the winter have a tough time the next year.  It is actually more fun to dig up your garden in the fall... you find surprises and get to properly assess what went down.

People are often come out gangbusters in the spring digging up and bringing in the new, and sometimes they feel defeated or overburdened in the fall and miss this great opportunity.  It can be hard to decommision plants when it looks like they might have a bit left... that's why we focus on the garlic and the leeks. The human brain works better starting things than finishing things... a little Man Robertson tip.  It's like getting a new guitar... you are tricking yourself into writing a new song because you need to justify the decision.  


Know your game, play it well, don't go backwards and don't be sorry.  Embrace failure as a learning exercise... be excited about failure, and if somebody tries to stop you from examining failure, avoid that person.  If failure continues to be negative, work to make it positive or seek professional help... a ball of hate is not positive failure.


Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Sometimes you eat the garden... sometimes the garden eats you.

I grew Popcorn this year... it's a bit of a different beast than regular corn... which I haven't really grown before either... so lets just say I'm kind of swinging at wild pitches.  But anytime you can garden and use sports analogies, well that's a Man Garden.


I think it is ruby red popcorn... of course I would know that for sure if I had made proper notes, but that is something we can't change now, so lets not let the things we can't change get in the way of progress... that sounds very corporation like, but I digress... Popcorn is kind of like a cob oven... when is it dry enough to use?  Apparently you want to let it dry on the stalk and then bring it in for some more drying, or you can sun dry it, some even talk about oven drying it.  I tried some test pops the other day and they just cracked open a bit yielding tasty little oil soaked snackers.   Apparently you want to dry it but leave a bit of moisture in there to pop.  That of course is the physics in the popcorn... the moisture in the kernel heats up to a point where it creates pressure and "pops" the corn. It's all about the right level of moisture...  drying times can be confusing... drying something in a desert in Arizona will be faster than drying something in the Pacific Northwest rain forest region.  It's all about the eyeball technique mixed with common sense, and of course some vigorous scientific tests (remember the control).    What is a control?  It's a little thing in an experiment... this would be a known batch of working popcorn to throw in with the test popcorn to observe for proper popping conditions.   OK I'm stalling here... this is why.

My other corn went well...  I had to pollinate it by hand as corn is best grown in a field in rows so that the corn tassels (top of the plant), will drop pollen onto the silky hairs of the corncob and thus pollinate.  When corn is planted scattered in spots where a gardener might have been in a "savage attack planting frenzy", it is good policy to grab some pollen from the tassel and manually rub in into the silky hairs of the cob ensuring full kernel production.

That I did all right on... my main corn problem happened today when I went out to cull the garden of plants that have finished their cycle.  The corn is done so I was getting it out of there.  First I tore out the cucumber plant that supplied me with the last batch of pickles I put in the crock the other day, and then I moved on to the corn... I was in a spirited and invincible mood and so I just grabbed a plant by the stalk and ripped it out... you know... a little man strength, some brute force... what could possibly go wrong.  Well one thing that could go wrong is that the plant doesn't want to give and your hand slides up the stalk and the hard plant material slices your hand  up leaving deep cuts on your fingers causing insane bleeding.  I'm not going to lie to you people... sometimes the Man "use brute force and attack first, and then think" mindset, can occasionally backfire... and sometimes those backfires are like sonic booms... It's OK you just have to own it and come back another day.

Unfortunately we were out of useful band-aids  (this happens when you live in a house with 3 children who more often then not need a band-aid).  I rigged something together with toilet paper and since I figured my gardening day was done I set off to the fencing store to buy some brackets to hold a roof over my newly constructed Cob Oven.


It's all about not letting little setbacks become bigger setbacks... unfortunately when signing for the brackets I moved my fingers and split open the wounds again causing an awkward blooding of the service desk at the fencing supply store.

What to do, what to do! Well better go to the studio and check out this new Tabor song mix... and in the process I run into a nurse doing some gardening (indeed we are still on gardening techniques).  It's always interesting running into a pro when you have Macgyver'ed a solution to the problem.  Suddenly the toilet paper held on by kids blue duct tape over my wound looked less genius and more crude... so that got sorted out next thing you know I have a proper wound dressing.... but then I hear what our nurse is up to.  You see she had a bad gardening year, and she is a bit disappointed with this so now is in the process of physically changing the appearance of her garden area.  No point having bad memories flow into next season... get on the change now and be ready for a "fresh new vibe".  Anytime you can do something to dial in the gardening area and help make it more of a "happy place" the better for gardening yield, and the happier our gardener will be.  We do garden for serenity right people... clearly nothing begets serenity like a dominating yield... some may argue that serenity and dominating don't belong in the same statement... those are the people you don't want to listen to... they operate in the technical blind spots of "yield orientated" gardening.  You know, you don't want to let down your guard when mixing spirituality with gardening.  Next thing you know you will be accepting mind-boggling errors as things that were fun anyways.  Instead of cursing yourself for not wearing gloves and swinging a machete, you will have thoughts like... well at least I got out in the sun today.   Basically that is the same as saying that "I risked UV exposure and injured myself and I'm OK with that because I love myself"... sure you should always love yourself, so it kind of sounds good but sometimes a little hate can be a good motivator.  Now if you can't love and hate yourself at the same time then go for love.  But if you can see the hate with love and the hate can help bring a positive change, then this is a good thing... am I wrong? It's like "waking up" a hockey player with a big hit... you know he is out there kind of sleeping through the game and then he gets hit hard, and gets angry and feels a little hate... next thing you know that guy is dominating the game and changing the outcome.

If it's too hard to understand that, then don't try... it might not be the right answer for you... every problem has many different solutions and our job is to find the one that best suits ourselves. Just because I happen to be inspired by disorganization, brute force, irregular cackling, anger and competition doesn't mean everybody is... (hint it's kind of fun)

Namaste