Wednesday, March 21, 2012

makeshift potato garden

I had already ordered our seed potatoes when I realized that we would be doing a smaller scale veggie garden (in the future herb garden beds) this year. 5lbs of russian banana (absolutely the tastiest and waxiest textured potato ever) is a lot more than we have room for in there. But people grow potatoes in all kinds of containers, right? So I scrounged through the junk on the property for old nursery pots and compost bins, and viola! It's not pretty, but I'm fairly sure it will grow potatoes just fine. Right now the seed potatoes are covered with a layer of rotted straw, and I'll continue to bury them with whatever we have handy as they grow. Updates to follow.

Friday, March 2, 2012

Know your blogger..?


It has recently been suggested to me that I should provide a little personal background..

I didn't grow up in a rural area. In fact, as a kid I prided myself on my urban-ness. I had family in the country, but I thought they were uncool because they didn't wear jordache or listen to Madonna. In college when most people were experimenting with sex or communism, I was developing an obsession with... farming. I had moved to a rural area for school because it was cheaper, and at first I dreaded every interaction with "large animals" as they are called in veterinary medicine. However, certain utopic aspects of the agrarian lifestyle started to appeal to me. I began to garden on my patio, I started reading Wendell Berry, I became a foodie.. you get the idea. Since I was already committed to a career track at that point and needed to go where the work was, I spent the next 15 years or so working in veterinary specialty practice and gardening where I could. At night I read seed catolouges, Mother Earth News and other "farm porn". I worried about local food resilience and carbon footprint. I schemed feverishly about what I would do if I could get my hands on a little useable land of my own. In the midst of my self cultivation as a fanatically self reliant, solitary Luddite, I met my partner Mr. High Tech. I'm not kidding, this guy has a technology radio show. He thought that zucchinis grew under the ground. But good natured fellow that he is, he picked up a shovel to help out after only a couple of years. I've even heard him get on a soapbox about eating locally at parties. I'm so proud. While his first question while house hunting remained "what kind of Internet access can we get here?" the second one was "can we grow food?". So here we are, the yin to each others yang. Our daughter will know how to program a computer, AND how to graft an apple tree. We hope.