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"Where better to care for the soul than in the details of our daily lives?....The soul has an absolute, unforgiving need for regular excursions into enchantment. It requires them like the body needs food and the mind needs thought... An enchanted world is one that speaks to the soul, to the mysterious depths of the heart and imagination where we find value, love and union with the world around us. As mystics of many religions have taught, that sense of rapturous union can give a sense of fulfillment that makes life purposeful and vibrant." ~ Thomas Moore.

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Pamelindalee's Remote Garden

 Sighhhhh......

So my friends, time has passed, but here we are. It is amazing, that.

How do you all fare? How do you feel? Feel free to share if you like.

I have some pictures of the "gardens" such as they are on this property. It is coming along ever so slowly. It is more like working with stone than soil, and with feeling instead of knowledge. Knowledge of what should be working and what should not is out the window. Here, it is completely a moody land and intuitive acuity.

There are alot of anomalies in this plot, one of which stumps even the most erudite of brains. For example, two plants planted with the same soil at the same time, right next to each other will behave quite differently from each other. This is happening alot. Seeds from the same packet with have one that grows and the others not. Etcetera.

But I am here to show to my dear friend Pamelindalee what has come of her gifts to our gardens. Gardens which are created to nurture beauty, and comfort, solace, as well as food. Flowers for the spirit, herbs for healing and tea, {which I will now go and pick some dandelion flowers for tea}, salads and veggies such as tomatoes, eggplant, jalapeno peppers, but collards do the best. Red lettuces have taken one full year to grow to a plant large enough to harvest. Their seedlings stayed at one inch for 8 months, then grew. We are also growing corn with sunflowers and mizuna in one bed. There are also peaches and new apple trees. I will show in pictures below. I hope there is some beauty here. These pictures were taken this morning around 8:15 when the sun was coming up. Just something about that first light that is magical.

A vase of flowers for the bedside table, sweetpeas, larkspur, jasmine, queen anne's lace, something I don't know :D growing from a pack of flower seed mixes. Just prettiness.

 
 
"WE are the ones who can be
omnipresent in a purely loving way." ~Pamelinda.
 




The archway is full of jasmine blooms, and the scent everywhere is wonderful.



"Our multidimensional self is here.
It is already formed and WE breathe 
life into it." ~Pamelinda


These Queen Anne's Lace are taller than me. I adore this flower.




I threw hundreds of seeds into this circular garden when I prepared the beds. Some were single flowers and others were mixes. There are alot of weeds in there that I have not taken out yet as I did not know what some of those flowers would look like growing so I left them. Most are turning out to be flowers actually. But in there are primrose, larkspur, queen anne's lace, red poppies, and other things that are still in their growing stage. It looks mostly weedy, not the kind of flower patch I wanted, but this is the first year for this circular garden and I wanted to see what grows and how.



There are also some lettuce gone to seed.

"As we release aspects of the slave self,
our TRUE self automatically steps in."



These arches and obelisks below were for climbing roses. But the rose got buried and is no longer to be found. The sweet peas decided they didn't want to climb as was their nature and to ignore the obelisks I bought just for them and instead sprawled outward, completely ignoring their nature to wrap tendrils around anything near them. They wrapped around each other once they flopped and the obelisk remains vacant wondering about the intelligence of those sweet peas. They are on the left side of this, and I did not take a picture of those embarrassing floppers, though they are producing, very late, some flowers that are heavenly scented. I cut them all and put them in a vase already.

 





 

 This lean-to below I never posted in a picture as it was so ugly before we just added the lattice and trim onto it to finish it last week. It no longer looks like an unfinished ugly thing. Its not pretty by a long shot, but it is still only where the mower, wheel barrow and garden tools/supplies go. I also keep the lettuce mix greens in bins here, they seems to like it and grow well over and over, so I keep them here.

This lattice is also the structure for morning glories I planted at the base along with some purple hyacinth bean, hopefully they will cover this in the summer, hence the branches to help them sprawl.



 

The lotus are doing very well this year. I remembered to fertilize them. This one already has a bud towered over the aerial leaves. This is a plant I love so much, it is such a beautiful water element.


This is part of the lean to the previous owner built. I added the cattle panels upright and am using it for the jasmine, rasberries and grapes. So far the jasmine is doing well. The grapes are being moody for 3 years now. Last year they produced meager grapes and they were sour. I planted sweet ones. I hope they do well this year.


The three main veggie beds each 4' x 8'. They should grow some tomatoes, which we did finally get a lot of but not until December and January(!?)....dozens of full size tomatoes, then the frost came and killed the ones I could not pick as they were too green. We also have eggplant, collards, red lettuce, thai basil, lavender, and strawberries which are all coming up and back this year, but most of the strawberries were misshapen and not sweet at all. I ate them anyway. The middle bed is a mix of flowers, always a mystery. So far Chinese Forget Me Nots are taking over....though I have over 15 different species in here. We'll see what summer brings.


Here are a few peaches that developed after the frost killed over 70 peaches that were growing happily until then. We have maybe 8 peaches in total in all three trees. I still love them.


I use the carport as part of the garden.


On the south side of the house the wisteria is finally growing. It took 3 years. I've pruned it twice in the last 2 weeks, it is a crazy monster. I am hoping the blooms will grow longer and open up finally.


The front door has a wall of jasmine. The smell is wonderful.


Even the shed's jasmine is blooming well.


Behind the shed is a bed of planted corn, sunflowers, mizuna and arugula. I can't wait, they are all coming up so far.


My beloved Lotus.......

"What makes us powerful transformative Beings of Light is being  Light with full awareness of all that the dark is doing. You cannot transform without that knowledge yet remaining powerful in your Light/Love." ~Serena



The little weeping willow is filling out nice in its first season here. It's about 8 feet tall. I could literally plant 20 more weeping willow on this property and if they were all full sized I'd still have room for 20 more.


This spring, the only thing that did well were the two little apples. They bloomed so prettily! as small as they were. So here is a picture of one apple on one of them.


These are the north and south arches that I will plant with something that will do well. I keep hoping for climbing roses, we'll see.


I call this my Stonehenge Tea Table. :D


And finally the view from my back door, it is lovely first morning light when it is misty from dew in the sun, low light, and sparkling dew drops on everything.



Stay in your light. 

Nurture your light and only your light. 

Grow your light and dwell in love. 

Shine that love over the darkness you see and never waver. Not for a moment.

 

Saturday, January 1, 2022

Pictures and Notes for Pamelinda and Friends

Hello Bloglandia.

*lots of pictures.

I do not write as much as many do not these days. We have been so overtaken with other things that pleasure and creative writing have been thrown aside.

But I am not here to write, I am just wanting to share some pictures I promised to a friend, to show my gardens such as they are, and the results of her gift.

I will post the pictures and comment above it.

I am a gardener heart and soul. I love nature and our relationship with Her. Nature of course as a living being is symbiotic with us, both biological and spiritually. I cannot explain that to anyone who hasn't felt this, but it is really a beautiful thing. It can only be called love and I am ever faithful to this love.

In current times, once again, Nature is calling for us to merge with Her, to work with Her and to understand that we can not do well without Her. To this truth I am dedicated to gardening, the soil, the trees, plants, wildlife and everything in between. I want to care for and nurture that natural life here. We need each other.

However, this particular area I live in is beyond challenging. I thought I had to give up since nothing is working out right, not even the easy growing plants, like tomatoes, potato vine, and many other things that people can grow in a wide diversity of conditions.....here it is not happening. I even have a neighbor who moved in recently and is a permaculturist. He recently told me he has given up trying to garden here. That is intense. Then the difficulty is not in what I'm doing or not doing, it is the area's energy. It is the first time I have ever seen such energy of Nature go against all my efforts. But I will not give up. I will find out what ails this place and try to heal it. I cannot tell you how much I want to cry over this, but I will persist.

This is a metaphor for what is ailing the entire planet. We must, in love, persevere.....it is our only salvation. If I succeed, there is nothing more important I could do as a living humane being. To heal a sick land, and nurture it back to beauty and bounty would be a gift.

 


So far I have planted over 70 trees and bushes, still in young form so it doesn't look like much, but 5 years from now, this property should have some gorgeous trees, shade, flowers and fruits. That is my hope. I also hope to see this beauty I worked so hard for.

I have a peach tree I particularly love planted close to the house right outside the kitchen window.  I did have some peaches from it the first year I bought it full of peaches. The 2nd year, last year, it gave me only 6, and now it is loaded with peaches. 

 

If we get a cold spell or a frost they will not survive. I am hoping we do not get one. It is currently, on January 1st, 2022, 78 degrees outside and my air conditioner is on....but that could change in one day.

 

 

One of the things I love most about some gardens is an Asian element. I wish I could have pagodas all over the property lit up at night with candles. But I have this one. It is a sturdy element, that gives interest when there is too much space. The birds love  it too.

 

 

 
 
 
 
Below is a lean-to next to the shed and the large table we built originally because I wanted to have large dinners with lots of people....well, thats not happening....so it is a very sturdy seed table where I grow greens for salads. I can watch them closely in the bins they are planted in they will not dry out as they have no drainage. In the smaller bins I have lettuces which are taking 5 months to grow. An abnormally long time, its just not really working out. I have tried many times and I will continue.  The larger ones are a Spicy Mesclun mix, the only ones that always grows and grows fast. I love this blend.
 


 
 
 Below are more greens in window boxes. The one that grows with no help at all is mizuna. Right now I have a lot of it, I don't know what to do with. It is the only one that is hard for me to eat because the stems are tough, and yet this is the one that grows the most. 
The window boxes below the mizuna are lettuces which again, not growing well. They have been this size for months. In the raised bed is lemon sorrel. It is nice in salads. It wilts in the sun but only get sun for a couple of hours, then it stands up again.


 
 
 
 
Below is a thing of beauty that stands alone in a spot that has not much beauty. But this pot has a lotus plant in it and in the summer produced 2 blooms. They were precious. I am hoping the coming summer it will produce much more.

 
 
 
 
This should have been the first picture. It is the view from the back porch. I have taken down this archway......
 
 
because for 2 years lush green vines did not grow on the 30 foot walkway. So that came down, and I built a circle of lattice wood. I kept one of the arched panels because the jasmine is growing well around it and bought arches for each of the 4 directions, north, south, east, west, to keep it open and so I can drive the mower in there.
 
 

 
 

 
 
For this circle garden I wanted to make sure the soil in the ground would be friendly to the plants. It seemed nothing wanted to grow here, so I knew I had to work the soil. This was laborious. First I marked out the circle with a string and spray paint. An outer circle and an inner circle, that gave me a 5 foot wide bed, and a 30 foot diameter. I then laid down many cardboard boxes I got from John's job. Then I laid down bags and bags of compost bought from the store. Then loads of sawdust, then azomite, then grass clippings. There was more but I don't remember. Then I waited for the summer heat and rainy season to cook it down for 3 months to break everything down. When John was laying in the edging to keep the grass contained around the perimeters, he said he saw worms. That is a good sign I thought, the ground must be ready for planting after 3 months of intense heat and rain. I wanted to plant in September but I didn't have the seeds I needed until October. I planted lots and lots of seeds in that 5 foot wide bed, 30 feet around, mostly flowers, because I want a garden and though the seedlings came up quickly, they remain only an inch above ground for 3 months. Only a few plants have grown, like the allysum, and some of the salad greens. And though there are many green things growing in there, I no longer know what is what either because all the tags faded in the sun.
 
 
Below is another angle of the circle garden with the citrus tree that has both lemons and oranges. It is a hybrid.  
 

 
 
Below is the inner circle with small salad greens growing. Not nearly as much as I planted, but some are growing. 




Below is a speckling of purple allysum and lots of green things that do not resemble what I have seeded, at all.
 

 
 
 
 
This below is another section of the circle that is showing white allysum and lots of green mysterious things that will not grow more than this for 3 months now.


 
 
 
The sun is too harsh to see what is growing here, but when I try to take pictures when the sun is not so bright, it is too dark. lol.
Anyway, lots more green little things of a mysterious nature. The bushes are hydrangeas I had in pots, that went in to fill this circle. I am hoping that they will bloom in the spring. They should be blue.


 
 
 
Below is a camellia that is supposed to be white with pale pink edges, the way it was when I bought it. Now it is dark pink, but at least it is blooming a bit.



Below are the three main raised beds. The have veggies on either side and the center bed should be wild flowers. ahem...should be is key word in the garden. I planted the wild flower seeds in the spring and it took 6 months for them to grow only zinnias and a few forget me nots. It did not do well, despite this soil being one of the best on the market. I replanted lots and lots of seeds in October everywhere and they are also very small still, after 3 months of good weather.



Below is the left bed with a huge lemongrass plant behind it which makes the best tea. In this bed are the tomatoes, which did not do well in the summer, but now we have about a dozen normal sized tomatoes growing which is making me giddy happy. It is totally the wrong time of year, but just yesterday I took off 2 full red tomatoes, and others are ripening up.

 

Also this bed has red lettuce, zinnias, thai basil, strawberries and nasturtiums which are not only a beautiful plant but every part of it is edible. I love the peppery flavored leaves and crazy colorful flowers.

 

 

 

In this below picture you can see the nasturtiums in the foreground doing as they should be around all three beds perimeters. But only this one is doing well. Overall the plants are doing better than in the summer.

 

 

 

 

 

 Below is the middle bed of the wild flower seeds. But since it didn't do anything I began to throw in some edible greens, but they are not doing anything either. Just a few cosmos have come up. The large leaves are hollyhocks, a tall large and beautiful cottage garden flower. They may bloom in the spring. The nasturtiums are struggling here too. I planted nasturtiums all around the edges of all three beds to have an overflowing green mass of coral and red colors. But that is not happening. Only a few plants are doing well, and even though they were all from the same seed packs, they are doing differently.

  

 

This is the right bed, and here are collard greens, cabbages that are struggling even though I never had problems with those before, some romaine lettuce, eggplants and scallions. The empty spaces are filled with edible greens seeds, but nothing came up.

 

 

 This is a small seating area under the carport behind that massive lemongrass.

 
 
 
Below are some pink floribunda roses that give off a lovely scent all the time. The smell when I go out there of the roses and the wood mulch I put under the carport is a pleasure. I also have some lettuce seedlings in 4 inch pots that have not grown in 3 months.
 



 

As I was taking pictures my cat Sarah came bolting over to me and then scrunched down in the shade of my legs. She is a huge brat. :D


Well, I think that is all for now. This is the state of my "garden", which is actually much better than the summer was, but it is unusually warm here now, so the tomatoes took advantage as it does go down into the 60's at night, and that is good for us all. This is as much as I could do.

I will however, despite the challenges, continue to garden and love the land, no matter what. It is the truest love we have.....and though She may be sick here, it is my honor actually, not to mention responsibility to help Her heal. When all is well, there will be no greater reward for all.


Blessings for the coming year of 2022.