Questions?

Questions? contact us at cvg.victory@gmail.com Located at 707 New Byhalia Rd, Collierville, TN - behind Collierville Christian Church

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Victory Garden is a never ending job and joy

Mimi's pom-a-poo and me drove old Rocinante to the Victory Garden to see what we could see this morning. We were rewarded. See pix at end.

The garlic is getting large. Two elephant garlic of 22 I planted Dec. 19 have peeked they trunks (shoots) above ground. I dug under one last week and saw it had not begun to sprout but already had a powerful root system.

The turnips continue to grow as do the carrots, onyuns, and daikons.

A beautiful redtail hawk was perched on our gate. I managed to get a distant picture. Bluebirds were perched on the back fence. I hope you can see them in the picture below.

I am advising an Eagle Scout candidate who is building a community garden at the Schilling YMCA,
a church in Collierville who wants to build a garden, and a homeowner in Eads.

I give them these sine qua non bon mots:
1. Gotta have sunshine, water, living soil, and protection from critters.
2. Gotta have a list of volunteers signed up to work a given shift at least every week or two.
3. A garden is an almost every day commitment for someone.

On that last point, an old adage is the best fertilizer is the feet (some say shadow) of the farmer. That is so true. One must be on constant look out for bugs, weeds, soil moisture level, whether or not the seeds have sprouted, and much much more.

This constant attention also keeps you in tune with nature. People ask me when do I plant. I can give them some rules of thumb, but in truth, that decision is based on ones sense of the soil, the possibility of rain or frost, and the short and midterm temperature expectations. That comes with experience.

I learned so much from my inlaws Ralph and Opal Graham. One of his frequent sayings about spending a lot of quality time in the garden was: You could lose a crop. For subsistence farmers of the generation previous to him, that could be catastrophic.

Its the same with cattle. He said they need looking after every day even though he only had a few at a time, had plenty of pasture grass, and a pond for them to drink from. You need to see if one in injured, has a cold (nose is running), has an eye problem, or is ready for the vet to come by and inseminate her (her behavior is telling). Losing a cow, or trying to sell a sick or injured cow, or missing a cow by missing a reproductive cycle, is a big loss to a small farmer.

So I try to get by the garden at least every other day all year long, if for no other reason than to meditate and be thankful!

Ain't God good!
cw

Bluebird on blue post

Elephant garlic trunk peeking out

Beautiful garlic patch

My Rocinante

some turnips still growing

Retail hawk on middle fence post

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Victory Garden Jan 5 2013

Whit, Bob, Irene, Les, Dave & Anthony & Leah, and moi had fun in the Victory Garden this morning and got ever thing done on the list:

Checked one of the 24 elephant garlic cloves planted 3 weeks ago and none have peeked they trunks above ground but it wuz growing a root system.

Planted 24 more cloves of an unknown grocery store garlic clearance sale.

Pulled up the cabbage stems.

Cut off the aspergrass stems.

Mulched all the remaining bare ground.

I ordered some seeds online yestiddy.

I get to do PR for us speaking to the Lucy Garden Club on Monday and the Twentieth Century Club on Wednesday.

Mrs Clarene Russell made a $100 donation to the Food Pantry in our name. And the ladies at the Food Pantry honored me with gift card to Bonefish Grill. I feel a little guilty.

NICE article about US and the garden in today's CA:
http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/jan/04/collierville-victory-garden-produced-more-than/

Hoping to get some Eagle Scout projects going to make our infrastucture better and more secure and easier to garden such as more raised beds and better plot borders. ALl ideas welcome!!!!!'

Remember per our agreement with the good folks of Collierville Christian Church, before we work in the garden each year we have to sign a liability release form.

Ain't God good!
cw

front entrance

bob irene and les mulching

north side

anthony leah and dave

bob admiring the dark rich humus living soil

south half