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Early
Blossoms Tell Us, "It's time to feed".
By Ken Lain, The Garden Guy

When 60 people, many of them first timers at the nursery, attend
a gardening class on how to become better gardeners I ask myself:
“Why?” The answer is that there is a renewed interest
among younger families wanting to learn about growing all things
edible. I find there is a longing to trace the history of where
our food originated, to be in harmony with our planet, and to
be good stewards of this earth entrusted to us. The increased
numbers of newcomers wanting to enter the age-old fraternity
of gardeners is heartening.
Most people pigeonhole work and play into
separate ‘boxes’ of their lives. Eight-to-five in
the cubicle is one compartment; weekday evenings watching sitcoms,
carting the kids to soccer practice or ballet class, and weekends
of golf, a long afternoon hike, or kayaking on Watson Lake are
in another ‘box’.
Gardening is difficult to fit into only one
box. Pulling weeds and digging holes can hardly be called recreation,
but gardening doesn't fit neatly into the ‘work box’
either.
Gardening is the most popular hobby in America;
however, the hobby label seems pitifully inadequate for this
ages-old pastime. Gardening can be a passion, a calling, often
more than just an avocation. What term should be applied to
a pursuit that takes so much out of you yet gives back so much?
It's getting out of the car after a long day with your brain
frazzled, body drained, and finding that you can't wait to lose
yourself in dragging hoses, tending tomatoes, and transplanting
zinnias and geraniums. Although at day's end you're left with
sore muscles and more weeds to pull, you also find that your
soul has been nourished, your spirit rejuvenated, your well
being re-centered. To a gardener, in the hierarchy of all things
important, gardening is very near the top.
One reason for its importance is that our
awe of gardening can be passed along to the youngsters in our
lives. Rachel Carson put it clearly: "If a child is to
keep alive his inborn sense of wonder, he needs the companionship
of at least one adult who can share it, rediscovering with him
the joy, excitement, and mystery of the world we live in."
My grandparents shared with me the magic of their vegetable
garden. Together we planted radish and carrot seeds and they
got as excited as I did when the seedlings poked out of the
ground. We later shared the pleasure of eating what we had grown.
My father-in-law, Harold Watters, started
his garden center back in 1962, and some of those early customers
are still shopping with us. Because of these long-time gardeners
I can testify that gardening is important because it keeps a
person young. I don't know of any scientific data on the subject,
but the many elder gardeners I’ve known exhibit a certain
nimbleness of step, a bit less stiffness in knee and hip than
their non-gardening peers. Elder gardeners may pull fewer weeds
today than in years past and find their shrubbery has swallowed
large chunks of their yards, but they walk through their gardens
with a grace only a lifetime among the bees, butterflies, and
flowers can endow.
Gardening is important because, for my money,
it offers a less painful way of staying young than some Beverly
Hills methods. However, although it may be more pleasurable,
it can be nearly as costly. An avid gardener will spend $75
on a single hosta or daylily, and do so with no regrets. But,
thankfully, deep pockets aren’t essential to a gardener’s
enjoyment. A couple of 4-inch pots of pansies can deliver the
same exhilaration as a gardener’s most expensive acquisition!
Gardening teaches humility. It’s a heavy dose of belittling
humility when that $75 hosta is devoured by gophers or when
a prized rosebush is decimated by thrips! But gardening also
is important because it teaches the joy of nurturing, that delightful
responsibility of caring for a seedling that depends on you
for light, water, and life.
Gardening gives you an excuse to wear a silly hat that keeps
the sun off your neck and to hang out with other really cool
gardeners who covet your silly hat and expensive shears. OK,
so this can hardly be considered an important aspect of gardening,
but a bit of lightheartedness is always welcome in our lives.
Gardening is important because it can be part of the life cycle.
When our gardening days finally are behind us perhaps some young
people will discover one of our long-neglected gardens. As they
are cutting back the overgrown shrubbery they might encounter
some fragrant treasure sowed so many years ago. That treasure
may kindle in them something they will pass along to their children;
and so the cycle continues.
In a world where a battered economy, conflict and strife seem
to surround us, gardeners create spaces where peace and beauty
reign. In a time of rampant selfishness, gardeners set an example
of selflessness. Fortunately, as J. M. Barrie, the author of
Peter Pan, said: “Those who bring sunshine into the lives
of others, cannot keep it from themselves”. He must have
been a gardener.
The colors and textures you, the gardener, splash upon the ground
are soaked up by all the birds, butterflies, and passersby in
your neighborhood. But more important is that you, a gardener,
are the steward of a small patch of earth, and that you are
one among the millions who are helping to heal a wounded planet,
one garden at a time.
Until next week, I’ll see you in the garden center.
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