Gardening: A Sense of Accomplishment
Darrel L. Hammon
The beginnings of a garden |
When people ask what some of my hobbies are, I include
gardening, not that I am the best gardener in the world. Rather, I enjoy planting
things and watching them grow--the ultimate sense of
accomplishment—the planting of the seeds, watching the seedlings sprout through
the fine dirt, the continual growing and leafing out, the actual harvesting and
then canning/bottling of the fruits and vegetables, and then leaning back with
satisfaction that you have accomplished something, watched something come to
fruition from beginning to the end.
The growing garden |
This summer
has been one of those great summers of gardening. Anna Rose and Christiaan bought
a home in Pleasant Grove and assigned me the garden. “Make it grow” was the
only admonition. So, we made it grow—lots of hoeing, weeding, watering, etc.
And the outcome was phenomenal!
The "catch" of the day |
Emiline and William helped me quite a bit although Emiline wasn't totally excited about the worms and the grasshoppers.Plus, keeping a hat on William was more than a task. He hates them, but his mother said he had to wear one when he was outside.
William and his hat |
The peas came first.
Some of the pea pods |
Emiline and I planted them too
close, and we failed to stake them so they could grow up. So, they
became a tangled mess. But peas are peas, and they are delicious! Our
favorite, like many of you, is new peas and new red potatoes floating in
a yummy white sauce.
the art of shelling peas |
Pea boats--all aboard! |
We made some good hauls on a few days.
Another catch of the day |
Emiline wanted to hoist the beets to show them off. They were delicious! We ate some of them fresh, and we bottled a few for winter.
Emiline and her beets |
Although we didn't plant much corn, it produced quite a bit. Of course, most of the corn we ate at dinners.We trundled out, picked a few ears, shucked them on the spot, raced to the house, and placed them in a pot of already boiling water--a must if you want to eat fresh corn on the cob.
Cutting the corn from the cob after it has been blanched |
The rest we blanched and placed in storage bags for the freezer.
Blanching and bagging it |
We bought some peaches in Washington on our way back from Hailey and Joe's. Plus we gleaned some from an orchard just up the hill.
Peaches gleaned from an orchard |
The results:
Peach pie.....
My first peach pie--ever |
Peach jam.....
Peach jam |
Bottled peaches.....
Bottled peaches |
Plus, we scored some plums from a little place down the street where people place their excess garden stuffs. The result: yummy jam.
Plum jam |
Now, as all this sits on shelves, in our freezer, and in our storage, we look forward to enjoying our garden all winter long.
Wow! You have been busy! What a lovely garden! Even though it's a ton of work, I do miss having a garden here in the DR - we're lucky to have places to by fresh produce, but it's not the same as raising your own. Lovely photos, too!
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