Showing posts with label vegetables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetables. Show all posts

Friday, September 6, 2013

Dear little corn cob



After a long hot summer of watering and weeding and watching, perhaps my favorite thing to harvest is sweet corn.  On the BBQ.  Fresh off the stalk.  Still in it's husk.  Mmmm.

This week we are told our dear little one is the size of an ear of corn, inside my uterus that has expanded to the size of a soccer ball!!

Dear little corn cob, we already love your little ears.  We love to watch and feel your movements (even when they're keeping me awake).  We are happy to watch your silk ripen, and wait for that cold Winter day when we get to meet you face to face.  We all love corn, but not as much as we already love you.

What a wonderful treat to harvest, prepare and enjoy sweet corn grown in our own backyard!  What a delight to be so intricately connected to the process of growth from the very beginnings of a tiny seed, to our growing family's table fellowship.  What an honor to know you before you become the fullest You.  To know you while you're still a part of me.




24 weeks.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

What the Garden Grows

 This Spring I was far too sick to keep on top of my garden.  But I managed to toss some seeds in the ground, and we have all delighted in the growing things in our yard....even the weeds.  This year it really feels like a "hobby garden", with barely enough produce to feed ourselves, and sometimes not quite enough.  But what I love most of all is seeing the boys enjoy it, and begin to understand where our food comes from.

















Thursday, August 1, 2013

Dear little tomato,


A typical bedroom scene:  yoga mat with race car and bicycle, tiny smudgy hand prints on the mirror.

The website says you are the size of a tomato the same week my tomatoes in the garden are finally coming ripe!  We haven't gotten to eat any of our tomatoes because your big brother Seamus keeps picking them and eating them, or feeding them to Linus.  You've heard Linus barking, but what you don't know is that Linus loves you a ton - even though you're not born yet!  Linus loves your big brothers as his own brothers and waits at the door for them when they are gone.  Luke and Seamus have started taking turns feeding Linus his scoop of dog food morning and night.  They are going to be excellent, responsible big brothers for you my little tomato.

Right now you weigh about half a pound.  Gain eight more pounds and you will be exactly the same weight as your brother Luke, the day he was born.  Half a pound makes me imagine half a block of butter.  You weigh the same as my chocolate chip cookie dough recipe calls for.  Granted, I usually substitute some of that with peanut butter or oil.  When you grow up a little more you will get to try those cookies.  It's your Grandma Helene's recipe.  Your Dad's favorite.

We are nearly halfway through your incubation.  That reminds me of the caterpillars we watched this Spring.  They grew and grew and GREW, and then they incubated.  They sat in those cocoons for 2 long weeks.  Those weeks seemed interminable to those of us waiting for butterflies.  But they were worth it.  The butterflies came out and were so beautiful!  We are looking forward to you coming out of your cocoon as well. 

When you come, tomatoes will be long gone in the compost pile and in our bellies.  Your brothers will be even bigger and better helpers.  Linus will want to sniff your soft little head.  And fresh warm cookies will definitely be on the menu in the deepest part of Winter.  Your Grammy and Grandpa will be here from California to meet you for the first time.  And we will celebrate the New Year with you as our special gift for 2014, little tomato.  Grow and grow and grow.  You're not quite ripe, yet.


Friday, May 31, 2013

Rainy Days

The backyard is soggy, but all the boxes are planted!  The only thing left to plant is some herbs, potatoes and onions!
We've painted butterflies on paper because we've been watching caterpillars make their cocoons in our kitchen over the last few weeks!
Seamus painted with his hands...

Then everyone painted everything!

With homemade bath paints (I just mixed flour and water until I got a good paint-like consistency and added non-toxic tempera paint).

Bathtubs are easy to clean after too!
This was a very popular activity.  I put up some paper so I could enjoy the boy's paintings for a while.

And the ever-popular rainy-day activity:  build a fort and watch a movie inside it.




Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Autumn Colors





Last week I cleaned up the garden - and just in time!  The frost hit really hard the next evening, and everything would have been toast.  I brought in seven bell peppers, a bowl of tomatoes (a bag of green ones are still reddening up in the pantry), a crisper full of carrots, a dozen pumpkins, and seven cucumbers.  The last harvest.  In some ways, it really saddens me to say, "The last harvest", because I will miss watching my garden grow, and I will miss eating fresh garden produce.  But alternately I feel a little relieved to have it all cleaned up and gladdened that we got through a successful season, and now get the rest Winter necessitates.  Oh how hard work pays off: in fruitful harvests, and glad rest.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Lost and Found Luke Says

I found this list of Luke says, looked back on the blog and was astounded I hadn't published them!  What's wrong with me?  These are adorable!



Derek: You're putting words in God's mouth.
Luke: God telled me when I was in Mom's tummy that babies can't have wooden toys.

What is that in the world!?

Vests are tummy jackets.

Go to your Mom now, Seamus.

Dad, maybe we could give Seamus away at a garage sale so he doesn't do a lot of damage and make me share my toys.

I only want to share my toys with people who can say a lot of words like "please" and not cry.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Bouquet For My Dad


Dear Dad,
         I can't be near you today, when I'd really like to be.  I know you don't need me as much as you need skilled surgeons.  And since that is who is with you instead of me, I am somewhat comforted.  Perhaps you would find my presence comforting; the way I would be comforted knowing you were just behind those Operating Room doors, instead of 2,000 miles away.  I am sorry I am not nearer.  All my thoughts are on you this afternoon and I can't sit still.  I keep calling Mom, Sarah, Melissa, Derek, on the phone.  Listening, waiting, talking, talking and saying nothing important, and waiting to hear the words I'd give anything to hear, which are, "All's well.  He's doing great."  You have been incredibly patient these last few weeks, and now it's our turn to carry on the waiting game.
         While we wait to hear those magic words, I took these photos in my yard.  It's a lovely time of year here.  You would like it.  It's like April in Shafter!  June in Winkler.  My largest tomato plant has set two fruits.  My strawberries are pushing out green fruit.  The lilacs are at their peak, wafting scent up through the kitchen window.  This is my first poppy.  The hawthorne is attracting lots of bees.  I have a tiny "Prairie Joy" rose bud (not pictured).  And daisies and lavender and flax and honeysuckle and chives and irises and lily of the valley and pansies and spinach, spinach galore!  This is my bouquet to you, Dad.  I hope it cheers you.  It has done it's work on this end: reminding me of color, brightness, giving me fresh hope, and getting me out of my house and into the warm growing places you helped and inspired me to make.
          I love you so much, Dad.  So much.  So.  Much.

                                              laura











Thursday, April 26, 2012

Turning



The garden is full of so many wonderful metaphors applicable to life.  And death.

On Good Friday we began to turn the compost pile.  It took a couple days because we hadn't done it in a while.  It looked like such a towering rat's nest!  I finished pulling out the lovely black stuff at the bottom Saturday morning, tossed the rest of the decomposing material back in the bin and closed it up again.  It was really hard work.  Heavy lifting, shifting, carrying the compost to its new home and digging it in.  I was sweating.  Sweating and thinking.

It is so rewarding to harvest your own compost!  All that delightful black soil that I am feeding my garden with this year, was our kitchen garbage last year!  I find myself hoarding scraps in the kitchen to add to the pile because I love the freeing process, I love the end product, so much.  Linus does his part too.  He sniffs around the bottom of the box and finds any tidbits that may still be tasty and takes his teeth to them.  Then we toss them back in!  Last year our compost pile grew two heavy-yielding tomato plants - pro bono!  The compost bin gives back, abundantly.

The more you turn the compost, the better the decomposition, and the more harvesting you can do.  My goal this year is to turn the compost once a month.  That doesn't sound like much, but we turned it once last year and we got a good six inches (maybe eight!) by four feet squared of compost this Spring.  In my life, the more I turn the better I get too.

I've been feeling bad about how often I have to apologize to Luke for losing my patience with him.  I lose my cool, I shout, I get angry, I send him to his room in tears, and then I make myself turn and apologize.  It's become a pattern.  A pattern I have been ashamed of.  Then one day a few weeks ago I got impatient with Luke climbing all around inside the car while I was waiting to buckle him in.  Luke lost it first, and screamed at me.  I had a few choice words to say, but I held my tongue and before I could get angrier I got into the driver's seat, and took a few deep breaths.  Shortly, I heard a sniffle and a quiet, "Mom?" from the backseat.  "I'm sorry I screamed at you," Luke murmured.  I was so surprised I could barely choke out, "I forgive you".  My three-year-old has never apologized under his own steam.  Not until this moment, anyway.  It made me pause, and I realized that all of these times when I've been so ashamed of losing my temper, I did something right.  I apologized.  And my son's heartfelt apology is proof that we can learn from somebody else's mistakes.  I have to keep turning.  There's more to harvest.

The great thing about compost is that dead doesn't mean gone, or useless, or even sad.  After you finish that delicious, juicy cantaloupe, you put the rind and seeds in the compost bin and a few weeks or months later you find the most healthy, warm, black soil in the entire world, just waiting for you to plant something new in it.  Yes, perhaps you wish you could eat it again, if it was that delicious.  But the memory is savory enough to last a long time. Or perhaps it was moldy before you got to it and nothing good came of it in life, but in the compost bin it can find a new cause!  You might even get a surprise and find that one of the seeds has fallen just outside the bin and sprouted all on its own, volunteering a new, fruitful vine!


Three days after we had a wonderful Easter dinner with Derek's grandparents, celebrating Jesus's resurrection, Derek's grandma died.  We enjoyed her company Sunday, alive, smiling, talking, eating.  We talked to her Tuesday, while she lay unconscious and nearing death.  We saw her Wednesday, an hour after she breathed her last breath.  We saw her Thursday, dead, and in a coffin.  Sunday we buried her.  We enjoyed knowing Grandma, Great-grandma to our sons.  We sometimes regret that we didn't know her better.  Like me, she enjoyed gardening, and I think she would appreciate being compared to my compost.  I am sure Grandma turned plenty in her life: apologizing, repenting, forgiving, loving.  I didn't know her that long, only ten years out of nearly eighty-five.  And the last few of those years her dementia really got in the way of our relating to one another.  But I know she loved Jesus, I know she prayed, and I know she loved people and did her best to love them like Jesus does.  She did a lot of turning, had a really good life, and death is the last turn before the harvest.  We literally get to be dug into the ground after we die, left to decompose in the earth for Jesus himself to harvest when he returns to make a new creation!  How lovely is that metaphor!?  We will have new life - no!  We will BE new life, made from the old, made from the turning and turning and turning and turning.

This I believe.  Praise Jesus!
         

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Where'd Winter Go?


Yeah, sooo, it's January.  In Manitoba.  I don't think the weather got the memo.
But as you can see, we're not complaining.
Yesterday we walked to the park and played on the toys.
Light jackets, no jackets, sitting on the deck in the warm sun.
Luke went outside this morning in his gitch and threw the dog's ball for three or five minutes before I realized he wasn't dressed and dragged him in and . . . he didn't have frostbite! 
WHAT?!
A balmy 48 degrees fahrenheit on January 5th.
This one's for the record books.

Luke is so confused.  He keeps saying, "It's Spring outside!  I don't need my puffy jacket, just my Fall jacket, 'cause it's lovely out there."  (Yes, my three year-old says "lovely".  He's lovely.  We love him.)

Luke came in with sand in his pants today for the first time in months.
I got to enjoy my flowerbeds without a drift of snow covering them.
Linus dug in my carrot patch.

I just have to say it again, because I'm stunned:
It's JANUARY.
In MANITOBA.
And it's NICE OUT.
?!!!!! (imagine me gesturing questioningly with my hands up in shock) !!!!!?

Okay, I think I got it out of my system.
For today, anyway.



Also, I cleaned the windows inside and out, and that's noteworthy.  Maybe not for the record books, but impressive - for me.

  


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