Gardens

Saturday: Meditation, yoga, herbs, and laundry

There’s really no typical Saturday around here, but the arrival of the weekend does present an opportunity for activities and mind frames that just aren’t possible during the work week. For starters, the driving question changes from “What do I have to do today?” to “What would I like to do today?”–a significant shift. The pace of life slows a bit; tasks become more mindful, more meaningful. Years ago, I began attending yoga classes with my sister on Saturday mornings. Although never what anyone would call consistent, since then I’ve tried to keep doing yoga as much as I can, adding that and  daily morning meditation into my weekly routine. I’m terrible at hauling myself out of bed early in the morning, so I can manage meditation before I head off to work, but a full yoga session usually needs to wait until evening or the weekend. Doing yoga at home instead of driving to a class helps, although sometimes there are still some logistical problems…yoga cat

The great thing about Saturday is that (usually) I can get a meditation session and a yoga session completed in the morning. Feels amazing! Then, I can venture outside to see what the gardens have to offer. As it is mid-June, things are really getting lush and the oppressive heat of late summer is still weeks away. Our vegetable garden is a veritable jungle–so many leaves of different shapes, sizes,  and greens! Tomatoes are a basic, simple green, while brussel sprouts almost glow with a pearlescent, blue-grey green. Basil has a definite yellow-green quality to it. Makes me want to get out my box of Crayolas!IMG_2828

Meanwhile, over in the herb garden, things are finally taking off, too. There was a “battle of the slugs” back in May, and many seedlings were lost. However, the larger plantings survived and are now looking as they should. Here’s today’s harvest: IMG_2832

These will go down to the dryer and be stored until this fall and winter when we’ll open the jars, take a deep breath, and be transported back to early summer. It’s amazing to be able to store a bit of summer on the pantry shelves.

But now, the laundry calls. It’s one of the more tedious of the weekend chores, but definitely not one to be skipped. Besides, this kind of chore provides another opportunity for a little more meditation, a little day-dreaming about what lies ahead this summer, this year, and next. And before you know it, the laundry is finished. Until next weekend…

Gardens

Garden Tour – June

June is the month for lilies, butterfly gardens, herbs, and veggies. This is when all the planning and dreaming of winter comes to a head, followed by the inevitable list of all the things we’re going to do differently next year. That’s the great thing about gardening… it’s never the same two years in a row… sometimes on purpose!  So, let’s get started. We’ll be concentrating on the backyard for this tour. First stop is the herb garden. I love having the herbs surrounding the back deck. It’s handy for picking when you need a little something extra for the dinner meal; or, if you’re like me and often let your herbs bolt and flower (not always recommended), they make lovely bouquets for the table.  And, if you happen to be sitting on the deck when your husband is watering the gardens, the smell is absolutely heavenly!

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My all-thyme favorite!
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Oregano, mint, and a few lillies
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Oregano, French lavender, and a HUGE catnip mint
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English lavender

Then, moving away from the deck and taking a detour to the left, we come to the east side garden. Here we find everything a monarch or swallowtail or a few of their friends would want:

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Butterfly weed
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Butterfly bushes (and lillies)

In the back corner of the yard, we have an interesting ivy-covered relic from the past… a concrete wall that was part of a railway bridge many years ago. Now, it’s just a nice place for English ivy to grow. There’s also coral bells, bleeding hearts, lemon balm, a pot of impatiens, and Stick and Straw…two of our three concrete pigs. Brick, you may remember, is in the front yard.

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Lemon balm next to the bleeding hearts (and Straw & Stick)

And finally, turning to the west, we see the veggie garden boxes. For some reason, this year is the Year of the Tomatillo. I mean, really… you can’t see much else here except tomatillos. Oh, wait… maybe I see a bean in the back there….

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Tomatillos, beans, tomatillos, tomatos, tomatillos, peppers, tomatillos

Now this is a very cool thing. We’ve been adding native plants to the back yard each year. Last year, we bough a compass plant. It gets its name… I’m not kidding…from the fact that the leaves tend to orient themselves north-south. So, you can theoretically find your way around by paying close attention to the compass plant leaves. I’m happy to say that it seems to be true. Here’s ours:

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Compass plant surrounded by cilantro

And lo and behold… the leaves do, in general, point north-south. And, because one can’t have too much cilantro, we plant it everywhere.

The last stop on the veggie tour is our Swiss chard. Interesting, isn’t it, that many of our plants have nationalistic names… Swiss chard, French lavender, English lavender… love it. Oh, and next to the Swiss chard… more tomatillos. :-/

Anyone got any tomatillo recipes?

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Swiss chard… and… wait for it…. tomatillos!