What does your garden say about you?
When strangers and neighbours have walked
through my past vegetable gardens they have made certain assumptions. Some
true, some not so true. Usually they think I must really like beans, especially
after that year when I grew three beds of broad beans and spent far too much
time tending to the blackfly. Following the broad beans were multiple varieties
of heirloom bush beans, pole beans, and runners. However, I am not very fond of
beans. I don’t eat them often and thrust them into the hands of any willing takers.
I am simply enamored by their beautiful colours when dried, the names and
history of heirloom varieties, and the delicate flowers. The scent and
structure of broad bean flowers fills me with joy in Spring.
Although some of my choices, like the never-ending beans, may be misleading, you can tell a lot about me from flipping
through my seed stores or surveying what I grow. You would see that I value
old, unique varieties of useful and edible plants. I appreciate colour and my
choices cover the rainbow. I stray far from what is available in the grocery
store. I am highly unlikely to buy a red tomato and favour a multi-coloured
striped slicer. A vegetable garden is just not right without flowers.
Although my childhood vegetable gardens only included marigolds, now there is
calendula, borage, nasturtiums, feverfew, alyssum, and many other flowers
tucked amongst the veggies.
My garden says I like to be creative and experiment. This is displayed through my interest in trying out unique containers and growing methods. For example, this abandoned shopping cart garden I made a few years back. Or when I grew veggies in old wine boxes and wash tubs.
When I asked my partner what my garden says
about me he replied “CHAOS”, but after a few moments he followed with
“organized chaos”. In my life, I have a lot of passions and dreams I could
follow. I have a hard time deciding which ones I should devote my time to. My
garden follows my many interests as well. A love of unique edibles, mixed with
a passion for herbal medicine and teas, a desire to be able to grow the best
cutting flowers, followed by an interest in wild flowers and native plants for
pollinators. Somehow everything finds a space, although it can become quite
crowded. Not much is in neat rows and companion planting is key.
My partner says my garden shows a kind a
balance, but personally, I don’t think I’ve reached that yet, in my life or in
my garden. But I think I am in the process of finding it. I am slowly learning
how to build a patchwork of my interests and passions that allows me to thrive.
In the same way, I am learning how to fit the flowers, herbs and vegetables
together so that each part supports the other and makes a sustainable
ecosystem.
This year the garden will be different again and may communicate something new. I'll be growing plants on a 12th floor city balcony--a new challenge. I may have a community garden plot. I am impatiently waiting to hear if that will be a possibility this season.
This post was inspired by Gayla Trail's Grow Write Guild series prompt. Grow Write Guild is a creative club for those who love to garden.
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