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The
Effects of Gardeners' Hearts & Labors

J. M. Barrie, the author of Peter Pan, said:
“Those who bring sunshine into the lives of others, cannot
keep it from themselves”. Surely, he must have been a
fellow-gardener because gardeners create spaces where peace
and beauty reign. Their sanctuaries are not just for themselves
but are spaces they gladly share with others.
The colors and textures we gardeners splash upon the ground
are soaked up by all the birds, butterflies, and passersby in
our neighborhoods. But more important is that you and I, gardeners,
are the stewards of our small patches of earth, and are among
the millions who are helping to heal a wounded planet, one garden
at a time.
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When 60 people, of all ages, many of them first time gardeners
in the area, attend one of my garden classes on how to garden
locally I ask myself: “Why?” First, I find there
is a curiosity among gardeners of all ages to trace the history
of where our food originated, and to be good stewards of this
earth entrusted to us. Secondly, there is renewed interest among
younger families wanting to learn about locally growing all
things edible. There is an undeniable calling from this next
generation to be friendlier to our environment, and new gardeners’
strong inclination to organics is the reason my garden center
is a source for purely organic fertilizers, as well as disease
and bug controls.
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Most people pigeonhole work and play into separate ‘boxes’
of their lives. The hours of earning a living are in one compartment,
other ‘boxes’ are for carting the kids to swim practice
or dance class, weekday evenings are for watching episodes of
television favorites, and weekends dedicated to long afternoon
hikes or kayaking on Watson Lake are to be found in another
compartment.
Gardening is difficult to fit into only one ‘box’.
Pulling weeds and digging holes can hardly fit in the compartment
for recreation, but gardening doesn't fit neatly into the ‘work
box’ either.
What term should be applied to a pursuit that takes so much
out of us yet rewards us many more times over our investment?
We lose track of worries, stress, and time when working in our
yards. Getting out of the car after a long day with brain frazzled,
body drained, we find that we can't wait to lose ourselves tending
tomatoes, transplanting zinnias, that new spicy oregano, or
those newly introduced geraniums. Although at day's end we may
be left with sore muscles and more weeds to pull, we also find
that our souls have been nourished and our spirits rejuvenated.
To a gardener, in the hierarchy of all things important, gardening
is very near the top.
One reason for its importance is the awe of gardening passed
along to our children. It's the reason I do so much with our
local schools. 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 his experiences, rediscovering
with him the joy, excitement, and mystery of the world we live
in." My grandparents shared with me the magic of their
gardens. Together we planted radish and carrot seeds; 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. In
some ways gardening brings out in each of us the inner child
and that level of wonderment experienced in childhood.
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Last week at the garden center I spoke with an experienced gardener
who had just had a hip replaced. When I asked why she was so
active in the garden so quickly after her surgery, she quickly
responded, “I'm not letting this hold me back; I'll be
dead before I stop playing with the plants.” Hers are
the heart and passion of a gardener.
Experienced gardeners may pull fewer weeds than years past,
or find their neglected shrubbery swallowing large chunks of
the landscape, but they walk through their gardens with a grace
only a lifetime among the bees, butterflies, and flowers can
endow.
Gardening is important because it teaches us the joy of nurturing
and the rewarding responsibility of caring for a seedling depending
on us for light, water, and life. Deep pockets aren’t
essential to a gardener’s enjoyment, although sometimes
even I am surprised at how much I can spend on a new garden.
A couple of 4-inch pots of pansies and a tomato plant can deliver
the same exhilaration as a gardener’s most expensive prized
rose acquisition!
My dermatologist says “no more sun”. So gardening
gives me an excuse to wear a silly hat that keeps the sun off
my neck, and to hang out with other really cool gardeners to
compare notes on our expensive new shears, colorful bushel basket,
or stylin' gloves.
Gardening is important because it can be part of the life cycle.
When our gardening days are finally behind us perhaps some young
couple will discover one of our long-neglected gardens. As they
cut back the overgrown shrubbery they might encounter some fragrant
treasure sowed so many years ago. That treasure may kindle in
them something they pass along to their children, and so the
cycle continues.
Until next week, I'll see you at the garden center.
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