Thursday, July 21, 2016

Why Garden In the First Place?


So, pull up a chair and sit down and mentally munch on a piece of mental homemade jalapeño pepper cornbread made from peppers from the garden.  I grew the peppers last year and made that cornbread from scratch myself, cornbread never tasted better!  We've already touched on getting into gardening out of necessity, because the government just doesn't pay the disabled enough to live on and eat quality food.  And for those of us on it growing a vegetable garden, even one consisting of a few carefully chosen vegetables in containers, can go a long way to supplement one's diet with some healthy vegetables.  And the beauty of it is that the cost of doing that compared to buying it in the store is unbelievable.

Last year I was at the hardware store late in the planting season with an unexpected windfall in the form of a gift which I was putting on some needed things for the garden when on an impulse I spent a couple of dollars on a set of Beauregard Sweet Potato plants marked down for sale.  On the way home I picked up a $3 bag of really cheap potting soil and a $2 bag of mulch/manure.  Again, the cheap stuff.  I took a $5 tote I'd bought on sale for another purpose and mixed the mulch with the potting soil and planted some of the sweet potato plants.  I ended up giving the rest away.  But come the Fall this is what I got out of that tote:


Now remember, that was from a late planting and it was in a container, albeit, one which wasn't that small.  Try adding up what you would pay that many sweet potatoes in the store and compare and you'll see what I mean.  Those plants didn't require much in the way of care, I just kept them watered, that's all.  Since nobody else in the house will even touch what I grow, i'm still eating off of that November harvest.  Added to that some of the potatoes grew slips for me this and years planting hasn't cost me a dime.  I just reused the container with its soil and planted some in some grow bags I used for tomatoes last year.  So, the only reason they will cost me anything this year is because I've added some fertilizer to help replace what was lost from last year's growth.  That cost is minimal.  I'll have more this year from the look of things and since I know how folks are going to be about them I have a better idea of how to make use of them and make sure I'll have slips for the next year as well.  With God's help they'll be a gift that just keeps on giving.

That is one of the reasons folks who aren't in our position and can afford the grocery store get into growing vegetable gardens anyway.  It is a good way to be frugal, to make one's money stretch even further and bring other things one wants within reach.  In my local store the sweet potatoes are sold individually and plastic wrapped.  I know because I bought one as an experiment in growing from the tuber.  Last year I got one tuber out of that experiment.  This year I discovered I'd missed a couple of tubers when I harvested and had some volunteer plants from that planting, in the soil in the back yard.  The long run frugality is also a good reason to switch to heirloom varieties when one has the hang of growing the plants.  Saving the seeds reduces that cost tremendously.

Since soil is generally free, all one has to do if they choose to garden organically is to take care the soil gets built up, bur then that will be the subject of a future post somewhere down the line.If one has to buy it for containers, that cost will be spread across the years since the soil, and generally the containers as well, will be reusable.  So economically speak it makes sense to set up some kind of a vegetable garden, one which fits what ever situation or lifestyle one has.


We've already used this picture before, but it gives us another reason to garden, the beauty with which the garden rewards us.  People think a vegetable garden has to be some sort of an eyesore.That isn't really the case.  The Seminole Pumpkin, the subject of the picture, is a beautiful plant on it's own which provides ground cover over a large area and, well, you see this male flower.  All one really needs to do with it is to prune it to make sure it stays within whatever boundaries on sets and keep it watered.  Those large variegated leaves will add to any landscaping scheme.

Scarlet Runner Beans have beautiful red flowers and seem to put them out all through the growing season.
Not all of the flowers are as large as the pumpkin above, but others, such as the watermelon to the right are still quite beautiful in their own right and pleasing to the eye as well.  If one wants to add herbs as well as vegetables and fruits the possibilities for an all edible garden really grow.  There are other plants which aren't edible but are useful for warding off certain insects.  Certain marigolds will discourage harmful insects and are beautiful as well.

Pride of accomplishment is something that cannot be overlooked.  After the work, and there will be work no matter how we do a garden, we can rightfully take some pride in a successful result.

Not to be overlooked, though, is the sense of peace one will feel by sitting in a beautiful garden.  I’ve mentioned before that I’m a Christian.  Well, according to the sacred text I follow, the Bible in its Protestant form, the first habitation of mankind was a garden which had everything in the way of fruits Adam needed to thrive.  Is it any wonder, then, that we find peace in nature or in a nice garden?  As little as it is, I often find that I can go to my garden the part in the back, and sit down at the chair there at the worktable and find it easy to calm down and find a sense of peace when things are so tense in the house there.  I also find that sometimes now I’m drawn to it when nothing is out of order, just to sit and enjoy the peace of my garden

So there are plenty of reasons to plant a garden, even if it is just a few containers on a balcony.  In the beginning there is much to learn and we want to help with that end of things.  However, as one progresses and learns enough to be able to paint a canvas, so to speak, with plants like and artist does with paints the benefits will be many instead of just few and more than worth it.


3 comments:

  1. I now have a sweet potato sprouting in a cup! It's my first attempt at growing a vegetable...even though as a child we always had a garden and worked in it. Your grandpa Harrison was big on that..

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  2. I now have a sweet potato sprouting in a cup! It's my first attempt at growing a vegetable...even though as a child we always had a garden and worked in it. Your grandpa Harrison was big on that..

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good!

    Get you a five gallon container and put some good potting soil and compost in it and find some space in your yard you don't mind letting the vine fill up some and plant a couple of the slips in it. There are some videos on Youtube about how to do that. If you let more than a couple of slips grow you might want to think about a couple of the containers. The ones I harvested came out of a container which is a black Rubbermaid style file box I got on a sale at Walmart's. I did that with a 1 to 3 ratio of compost to potting soil, and both were el cheapo brands. Tis year I plan to do something different with most of the slips I'm going to have.

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