Monday, April 14, 2014

To Plant or Not to Plant

We don't know if we are moving out of state or not and won't know until the end of the month. We are on hold as spring tugs at our gardening shirttails begging us to get the soil ready. Ignoring this we are compelled to living in the moment.  Which brings me to writing the article below, share a recipe and gardening tips.

Spring Scenes from the Garden
Spring Clean Up and Chopping Wood

Art Project

Cleaning the Pond

Getting Ready for the Day Lillies

Getting the Beds Ready for Planting

More Beds


Predetermined Life

I don't know about you, but 2014 has been a humdinger for me. Talk about taking a left turn this year. I've already bored you with some of the details and will try to not bore you with the rest, but what I do want to share is that after two years of studies, I finally honored my truth - the inner voice that was telling me to take the left turn a long time ago. But as most of you know, one doesn't turn until it's time to turn and since this is such a great testament to one of the universal truths which is, nothing happens until it's time, it does give me pause to contemplate. Predeterminism is a hard concept for many Westerners who have been taught by this physical world that that we are in charge of everything.  The illusion that we create our own destiny is one that is fed to us through Oprah and the media, religion and various schools of thoughts. Ideologies which include i.e. If you try harder life will get better. If you do enough affirmations you will get what you want. If you dream big enough, your dreams will come true. If you make the right choice God won't punish you. If you learn the secrets of the universe, your life will change. It goes on and on and on. Which is why one day, I will write the shortest book ever written. Title - How to Find Your Path Book - Follow Your Feet. The End.

Believing in destiny, is a friendly debate that I have had with many. I say friendly, because it doesn't really matter to me what others believe. Sort of. I do seem to have a knee jerk reaction when someone's belief system enters into my studies that I am paying for, as that, for some reason creates a "rift" in a stream of consciousness that I can't seem to get around. This, I'm sure is a fundamental flaw in my character, because in my intellectual mind, I keep thinking, "Boy, if they got this universal law so wrong, what else are they teaching that may be in opposition of the divine or universal laws?" I am always suspicious that "ego" is out of whack when human beings think they have so much control over things they can't possibly control.

Over the years, I have searched for a more complete way of explaining what universal law means to me in regards to predeterminism, to those who I may be debating with and whom may not entertain these concepts. And of course, the best way for me to do this and sort it out, is by writing. So if you will indulge me once again, as I put these thoughts on paper, I do appreciate it.


It seems to me that the universe is lawful - sometime not and sometimes yes, are these laws logical. The law I am most interested in is the divine law. So forget trying to go to the one plus one equals two kind of thinking, because we are going to move past this physical law and into a law that includes all possibilities. This law of all possibilities includes everything that is on the physical and cosmic planes. By going into the divine law that includes all possibilities we can come to a predetermined, deterministic or preordained set of realities. Yes, I can hear you now, "Well, if there are all possibilities than there is the possibility of free will."  Now, just hang in there with me, until you can see where I am going with this.

Because there is no such thing as time - the past, present, and future are all perfectly lawfully related to one another. We are fooled, so to speak, that the future has not yet happened. When, in truth the future is happening right now.  Remember all there is, is "now."  The future and the past are ego-centric notions. The past is nothing but an emotional memory and future tripping is either desire-filled or fear based suppositions. Neither has anything to do with where the truth or reality is - which is, in the present. This of course, can eliminate the tired old response of "Well, if there is no free will, why don't I just sit at home and do nothing?" Answer: "What you are doing right now, in this immediate moment is your destiny." Or if that doesn't resonate, I respond with, "You aren't sitting at home doing nothing because that is your destiny." Others have pondered, "What is the point if there is no free will?" I say the point is for the experience or increased awareness by living life and paying attention. Free will, if possible, would be about ego. Experience is about growth of spirit which, for me, is the point. But for you, this may not be a clincher in this debate, so then maybe we can come at it from another point of view.

For a different approach, let's look at it through the eyes of my favorite guru, Ram Dass. He states, "It's very much like being a character in a book, where you're on page 23 and you don't know what's going to happen on page 24, because you think you're the character in the book. But now imagine you're reading the book - you could turn over and find out what happened on page 24. Now imagine you wrote the book. You would already know what happened on page 24." I love this point of view. You can look at the book as the character which is the most narrow of vision. Or you can pull back, widening the picture and become the reader/observer which is an even wider perspective, or finally, as the author of the book, (one with God) You see, the book has been written. If you can pull back far enough - you know the beginning all the way through to the ending. Within the cosmic law there is only one - not three separate illusions. The way in which it keeps manifesting in form or in these different planes and coming down into clouds and then solids -is perfectly lawful - you would say in effect, "He is the law." God is the law. The universe of form is the lawful manifestation, and because it is all lawful - past, present, and future - all are already.

For my husband and I, the experiences of our lives have taught us that things can change in a millisecond, so we are open to that possibility and really, no matter what we decide, it has nothing to do with the outcome at all. We just figure that we will know when we know. Honestly, I don't know any other way to think that would serve us in our highest good. Believe me, I never thought I would never again live in Michigan. Personal history has shown me to relax, because the journey, whatever it is, is always interesting.


Living on an island is a great reminder of how little control I have. The scenario unfolds. Do I get frustrated? Sure, sometimes I do. But that is just me, thinking that things should be some way other than the way they are. The island is my "guru" showing me where I am still stuck in my expectations, planning and thinking.

I wonder how long we want to live in the illusionary ego-driven drama of we are in charge of it all? As we are being preached upon through our churches and studies on how we need to make the right choices, these same institutions/schools preach "Not my will, but Thy will, O Lord." I say, make up your mind. But let's leave religion out of it. I propose that once we can break free of the notion that we live for the present, and that we are not who we thought we were, which is deciding it all, we may begin to surrender (a word that modern man misinterprets as weakness), to something that is so powerful, truth based and love filled, that we could do nothing but benefit. We actually might become aware of solutions we never even considered because we have tapped into something more powerful than our limited ego-based thinking.

So then why the heck are we here? I say for the experience but then again, we have always been here. Even when we transition we are still here. We never go anywhere. Where is there to go? Are God and you separate? Is Heaven and earth separate? Are the cosmos and our energy field separate? Is the earth and our consciousness separate? Is there any separateness? Or is there just oneness? And if you can give me the benefit of the doubt and admit to a world absent of duality and instead one with true singularity, we may conclude with the realization that there is an intense freedom from fear and unanswered questions. There would no longer be a need for judgment, but instead a duty for social responsibility - a love, respect and wonder at how perfect this world truly is, given a view from the top, the divine and the all-knowing.
 

From My Garden To Yours.......

Lamb Stew with Spring Veggies

Ingredients:
    •    1/4 cup all-purpose flour
    •    1 teaspoon fine sea salt
    •    1/2 teaspoon black pepper
    •    2 pounds lamb stew meat, cut into 2-inch chunks
    •    2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
    •    1 cup white wine
    •    2 sprigs fresh rosemary
    •    2 sprigs fresh oregano
    •    2 cups baby carrots, halved
    •    2 cups small new red potatoes, halved
    •    1 cup fresh English peas or frozen green peas, thawed
    •    1/4 cup thinly sliced green onions
Method:
Season lamb with salt and pepper and place in a large bowl. Sprinkle with flour and toss to coat. Heat oil in a large heavy pot over medium high heat. Working in batches if needed, add lamb and brown on all sides. Add 1 1/2 cups water, wine, rosemary and oregano. Stir to combine and bring to a boil. Cover and simmer for 1 hour.

Stir in carrots and potatoes. Cover and continue to simmer for another hour. Stir in peas. Simmer another 5 to 10 minutes or until peas are just cooked through. Remove and discard stems from rosemary and oregano.

Ladle stew into bowls and garnish with green onions. Serve immediately.

Nutritional Info:
Per Serving:460 calories (140 from fat), 16g total fat, 4.5g saturated fat, 135mg cholesterol, 560mg sodium, 24g carbohydrate (4g dietary fiber, 3g sugar), 46g protein

Special Diets: 

Dairy Free

Gardening Tip
Use Worm Castings for Seedlings
Your composting worms have worked hard to make all-natural, organic "black gold." Start your garden off right by using worm castings to grow your seedling. Here's how:

  1. Include worm castings as part of your seed-starting mix. Depending on availability and personal preference, mix some of these popular ingredients: peat moss, perlite, coco coir, vermiculite, finely shredded newspaper. If you don't have a favorite recipe, look online. Note: Don't use soil that might contain weed seeds. 
  2. Scoop the mixture into CowPots™. They are made from manure fiber and can be planted in the ground when the seedlings are ready. This enriches the soil and helps prevent root shock.
  3. Instead of buying containers, get a Soil Cube Tool to make your own all-natural, plantable pressed soil seedling grower. Add enough water to make the soil mixture the consistency of oatmeal.
  4. Follow seed packet directions to prepare and add the seeds.
  5. Keep your seedlings warm, watered and lit with sunlight or grow lights until it's time to transplant them

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Sometimes a Cigar is just a Cigar 

The past week's cold temperatures have been the antithesis of my high fevers.  I got some kind of crud and though, on some level, it's a good time to be sick because what am I going to do in this weather, anyways, the combination has made me feel a futility. I like to feel productive, even if it's reading a book, but I'm too sick to do even that. 

So I lay on the couch watching brain numbing television. I did a 30 rock marathon, four seasons of the X-files, six episodes of "The Legend of Mick Dodge" and documentaries that have been on my bucket list. Because of so much free time I begin to question if what I am doing is just clearing something emotionally and since congested lungs can represent grief, I begin to do something very dangerous. I become analytical.

Now, I'm not a Pollyanna about these kinds of things. I have done a lot of emotional work - this is my fifth year of kabbalah, and before that I wasn't sitting at a desk for 45 years ignoring my feelings. I was out singing the blues, emoting and dumping a rainbow of emotional baggage on stages across America-that's what artistic expression is supposed to do, free you from the trappings of self-doubt and denial. 

As the artist becomes more and more fearless, not caring how others interpret or judge their expressive self, the magic begins for them whereas the revelation of the true creative soul can take place.  I was lucky enough to be able to be a participant in this magical process several times in my life - truly freeing me up from old emotional glue.

But honestly, thinking about any of this is a waste of time. If the point is to not deny our deep emotional states by escaping into the rational mind, then why am I thinking about it? I don't think it's important to "know" why. I think the point is to fully experience the feeling.  If I want to take on the full range of whatever sadness may be lurking deep in my psyche than the only way to do that is to feel it.  Not identify it, or think about it, or talk about it, or put a face on it or anything else.  Just feel it like I do when standing in the ocean allowing waves of that experience to wash over me. Only then can I be free. And here's the catch, it then becomes about the experience, not the feeling - which is really the point. It is the experience that leaves you with the wisdom for soul. Feelings are just tidbits of information wrapped in ego. 

So with all of that being said, really, in the end, I feel like I had a cold. Nothing more, nothing less. Emotions seem to be even and clear. Rationality once again within my grasp while reminding me of  Sigmund Freud, who replied to Carl Jung when he was expounding on how Freud's cigar smoking was symbolic of some deep phallic connection, "Carl" He said, "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar." 

And sometimes a cold is just a cold.

From My Garden To Yours.......

Carrot and Spice Pudding

10 large carrots, cut in medium rounds and steamed until so
1/2 - 2/3 c. melted ghee
1 t. powdered ginger
1 T. cinnamon
1/4 t. nutmeg
1/2 t. sea salt
3-4 large eggs
1 t. vanilla
1. Preheat oven to 350°. Grease a 9x13 inch pan. For a thicker pudding, use a smaller dish or
casserole.
2. Place all ingredients in a high-power blender or a food processor and process until
creamy.
3. Pour into prepared pan and bake in pre-heated oven for 40 - 5- minutes or until set in the
center.
Variation: You can steam 1 large zucchini or summer squash along with the carrots to get in
some more veggies!

Winter at the Farmers' Market
Seasonal produce isn't just for the summer months: root vegetables, squash and fruits like apples and citrus from California and Florida are common in farmers' markets across the U.S. during winter months.

"If it's in season in the States and not coming from Argentina or Mexico, you can support farms on a family-level scale," says Erin Barnett, director of LocalHarvest, which connects family farmers and consumers. "U.S. shipping companies are getting more efficient, but it's more about buying directly from U.S. farms than reducing your carbon footprint in the winter. You're supporting more of a rural lifestyle that a lot of people have an affection for, as opposed to agribusiness. And you are able to ask the farmers questions about the food."

Indeed, supporting local farmers is becoming more important to U.S. consumers -- in 2008, 4 million people used LocalHarvest.org to find locally grown foods, up from 3 million in 2007. (You can too, using the LocalHarvest "Get Local Info" tool on the homepage of The Daily Green.) LocalHarvest lists 2,000 community-supported agriculture programs, around 100 of which sell direct to consumers through its site; if you want to stay local, you can also find 10,000 farms and almost 4,000 farmers' markets.
 

Wednesday, January 15, 2014


Winter Time on the Island
 
The ice is like a floor of jagged glass, surrounding the island. Here and there are open pools of water, which is good so that the swans and ducks can fish. It seems odd looking at all of this ice while I am pouring through heirloom seed catalogues. A bit like living in Antarctica wishing for open ground so you can plant. I know this is part of living in a place where there are seasons and I do love being in a shifting weather system but I miss putting my hands in dirt. As wonderful as Florida and California are year round, there is something to living through seasonal changes. I think I would go a little bit bonkers living in Paradise everyday - I really don't know how motivated I would be. Besides, I like cold weather. If I could garden in 40 degree weather that would be heaven...and of course, there wouldn't be any mosquitoes. But back to ordering my seeds.


 
Going through my seed catalogs, there seems to be a renewed interest in organics and heirlooms. Once a given in our culture now seems to be a specialty. I am hoping that this sends a message that many of us are interested in healthy choices rather than the easy way out which is to just eat what is in front of us without thinking what it is, how it was grown and where it came from. To date there are close to 30 countries that have banned Genetic Modified Foods including: Italy, Austria, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Portugal, Greece, Spain, UK, Switzerland, Norway, Egypt, Algeria, Brazil, Paraguay, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, India and though, not a country, Hawaii. It is encouraging that these countries have had long range vision and understand that saving a little bit of money is not worth the state of our health which is a trade many are willing to make until they get sick and then understand that there is nothing more important than their health.      

"Living on this island, being in the middle of nature while gardening has taught me that there are principles of nature.  

The principles, lessons or maybe even wisdom reveals itself while preparing the soil, choosing and planting the seeds, watching and watering and finally harvesting. I have come to understand that I am one with a magical cosmos that works on a multi-layered system of energetics. When watching a seedling break through the soil, there is a fundamental understanding that I am a partner with Mother Earth. But what does that actually mean? This is an ongoing lesson but so far, I know that I am a caretaker of the air, water, plants and animals as they are part of the complete eco-system. The Native Americans thought of the Elements, Plants and Animals as their brothers and sisters. I have to agree. To know this sets up a new awareness, a new responsibility.

"The responsibility is daunting really. To co-exist with nature, to honor our children by giving them longevity due to the health of the earth, to implant everyone that we meet with a love for nature, to remember that life is precious, to understand that nature was here first, and to never forget that we are not the owners of land, but merely it's guardian is a huge task.  No matter how much we have paid for our "property," it really isn't ours. How can you own the earth?"

The job or responsibility seems singular. I can't make anyone do anything. No one really cares about my opinion as they are too busy forming theirs and in most cases, it seems to me humans are unwilling to change their beliefs until something catastrophic happens. But every day I can take steps to make life better. I can be more self-disciplined in the smaller details of my life, renouncing anything that doesn't work for the environment i.e. pesticides, plastic, toxic fertilizers, weed killers and whenever I can, vote against anything that may include irreversible destruction of the foundation of our existence, hence war and nuclear power plants.

I try to set aside time to be with the world rather than use the world, never forgetting that I am part of the eco-system. It is a struggle to not be extravagant and just consume what is needed. I have to constantly remind myself to be aware of what we produce and consume locally, which may help to end decadence and luxury. The action of responsibility can stimulate self-reliance and the sovereignty of local community within the limits of the health and "remaining" resources of a permitting planet.

Maybe, I will continue to be reminded while looking at a sunset, or climbing a mountain or just sitting on my porch looking into a star filled sky. As I move through this incredible time, watching the planet's cyclic nature, I might want to continue to ask myself, "How can I help?  What can I do to make this world a better place?"  Whether I am struggling or not, there should be one constant thought and that is that we are all brothers and sisters - cells in the same divine body celebrating the diversity of all cultures and people and faiths, with a goal to live in unity respecting our differences. While I begin to wear this suit of generosity, compassion and humanness I have to include Mother Earth, who is not a raw material or a financial commodity. She is my mother. I am here to re-establish a harmonious and responsible co-created life with her.  In the solitude of a quiet mind, the same thoughts always return, "Be respectful of every living thing, be a participant and finally to know that like my human mother, I cannot buy, sell or forget my earth mother."      

From My Garden To Yours.......

 
Crockpot Pork Roast and Kale
3 lb. boneless pork loin roast, trimmed of fat
2 cloves garlic, minced 1
/4 cup Dijon mustard
1 tsp. dried tarragon leaves or 1 tablespoon fresh chopped tarragon
1 tsp. dried thyme leaves or 1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves
1/2 tsp. sea salt
1/4 tsp. pepper
6 c. chopped kale
1-1/2 cups broth or water
  1. Whisk together garlic, mustard, tarragon, thyme, sea salt, and pepper.
  2. Spread mixture over the pork roast and place in bottom of large crockpot.
  3. Arrange kale around the roast.
  4. Pour broth or water over kale.
  5. Cook on low 8 - 9 hours until roast is done.

Fennel Pecan Salad
This recipe comes from the Body Ecology Diet website. The Body Ecology Diet is one of a
handful of healing diets aimed at healing the digestive tract for total, lasting health.

Dressing:
1/2 cup cold pressed, unfiltered olive oil
1/4 cup raw apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup finely chopped pecans *
2 cloves of garlic, minced
3 drops of Liquid Stevia Concentrate or 3 pitted dates or 1 Tbsp. raisins
1/2 tsp. sea salt

Salad:
2 bulbs fennel, sliced thinly
1/4 cup fennel fronds, chopped
1 organic apple, cut into matchstick slices
1 tablespoon of roughly chopped pecans

  1. Place all dressing ingredients in a blender or food processor and blend until smooth. Set aside.
  2. Prepare salad ingredients. Toss everything in a large salad bowl except the tablespoon of pecans.
  3. Pour dressing over salad, toss, and serve. Sprinkle servings with remaining chopped pecans.
*I prefer to use crispy pecans soaked and prepared according to Nourishing Traditions by Sally
Fallon. If you do not have time or care to make these, lightly toast your pecans in a small pan
over medium heat until they start to give off a pleasant smell.
Kale Fish Patties
2 Tbsp. water
2 Tbsp. ghee or butter
1 pound soul, flounder, or other white fish (could also be made with salmon)
10 - 12 oz. kale
1/2 c. minced onion
1 tsp. sea salt
1/2 tsp. black pepper
4 large eggs
more ghee for sauteing

  1. Place water and ghee/butter into a large skillet or saute pan. Heat until ghee is melted. Place fish in the pan, cover, and simmer 6 -10 minutes until flakey. This will depend greatly on the thickness of your fish filets.
  2. While fish is poaching, place kale in a vegetable steamer or saute pan with 1/2 c. water. Steam kale until tender. When done, drain and chop finely.
  3. When fish is done, drain and place in a large mixing bowl using a fork to break it into small flakes.
  4. Add chopped kale, minced onion, sea salt, and black pepper. Mix well.
  5. Whisk eggs in a separate bowl until well blended.
  6. Pour eggs into fish/kale mixture and mix well.
  7. Over medium heat, melt some ghee - about 2 Tbsp. - in a large saute skillet. Form patties and place gently in the skillet. Saute until well browned on one side. Gently turn the patties and continue sauteing until the second side is well browned.
  8. Remove patties onto a paper towel lined plate. Continue cooking remaining patties.
  9. These are a bit delicate but very tasty. They can be served immediately or frozen and eaten over time.
 

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Wise Versus Idiot Compassion

As I assess the end of the summer garden, due to the rain - all my tall beautiful grasses are overgrown, the bamboo has taken on a life of its own and the butterfly bushes quickly outgrew their pots.  I am going to transplant as much as I can but because of the overgrowth, the garlic lived in the dark along with some of my other veggies so they did not grow.  I have to make the difficult decision of transplanting and horror of all horrors, eliminating some of the overgrown vegetation.  In the long run, it is best for the health of many of the plants but it is really hard for me to eliminate even one grass.  It’s funny because it is mirroring something going on in my life that has been a bit puzzling.  I have been realizing that I need to do some compassionate gardening with people who don’t have other’s best interests at heart.  Over and over again you suggest changes that could improve their circumstances, or forgive them for repeated behaviors.  But what seems to show itself is the same agitating story.  

"Real compassion includes wisdom and so it makes judgments of care and concern; it says some things are good, and some things are bad, and I will choose to act only on those things that are informed by wisdom and care."....Philosopher, Ken Wilbur  

Given the nature of the people I work with, the first thing each of us does is check in on why the behavior is bothering us - in other words what are we here to learn? Are we emotionally charged on this? This is necessary as compassion is not only our ability to be with another's pain and suffering but also to see and accept our own pain. Once this is accomplished, I know I have to ask myself, how many more chances, does this unaccountable individual get?  And is this the question I should be asking in the first place?     

“Yes, I am open-minded and compassionate, but never want to be so open-minded that my brains fall out”   

Of course, the picture keeps getting bigger if I get out of judgment allowing the questions to keep coming. If someone has a history of cheating, lying and/or stealing, when do I stop giving them another chance? Or do I even go there?  Do I just figure that life, the cosmos, the divine, the light or whatever has a plan for this individual, which I think is probably true, but then where does that leave me and what is my job? Do I still work with this person? Do I forgive them even though they are never accountable? Do I stand in a place of understanding that each person has their lessons and are disguised in drag, if you will, to teach each other theirs? And if they are in drag to teach others how to be compassionate, then do I love from a distance and just understand their role? I am leaning towards the latter. Like overgrowth in the garden, the plant living in the shade does not have a chance to live in the light until the shade, or shadow is removed, yes that’s true. But rather than the overgrowth being eliminated maybe it should just be cut down to size and with this adjustment, both can coexist - each understanding the other’s role but definitely staying within their boundaries so that they can thrive. Meaning each plant can do what it is here to do - experience the experience.  And with that, to not just blindly accept but be reminded like in classical Tibetan teachings, that sometimes more than compassion, we need to see with awareness and discrimination.

Idiot compassion is the highly conceptualized idea that you want to do good....Of course, you should do everything for everybody; there is no selection involved at all. But that doesn't mean to say that you have to be gentle all the time. Your gentleness should have heart, strength. In order that your compassion doesn't become idiot compassion, you have to use your intelligence. Otherwise, there could be self-indulgence of thinking that you are creating a compassionate situation when in fact you are feeding the other person's aggression. If you go to a shop and the shopkeeper cheats you and you go back and let him cheat you again, that doesn't seem to be a very healthy thing to do for others... Dali Lama  

This is known as wise compassion, that sees the whole situation and aims to bring release from suffering; its opposite is known as blind or idiot compassion, which does not take into account the whole situation and so, while appearing compassionate, is inherently unskillful and may actually increase suffering. For instance, idiot compassion occurs when we support or condone neurosis, such as giving a slice of cake to an obese friend. Yes, they may be begging you, but realistically you know that it will do them no good.  Another way to see idiot compassion is when we give for our own benefit, not for the recipient's, because we can't bear to see them suffering. Our giving has less to do with what they need, but plenty to do with trying to escape our own feelings of inadequacy. This is a more subtle point, but sometimes we can get so impelled to give that we forget why we are giving or what is actually needed. 

So back to the garden with shovel in hand, apologizing to the newly trimmed plant for cutting it down, while thanking it for doing its job and that the plants that will nourish us - garlic, asparagus and beets will have a better chance to grow.  Choices are being made that will serve the bigger picture while energies are going to where they are actually needed.  It seems that life on all levels is a place, a reality where decisions can be made on where the compassionate effort needs to be focused and all the while that this interaction is taking place, it is done in wisdom, for the highest good, with an open heart.  
  
From My Garden To Yours.......

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Kale Chips and Lebanese Salad

Kale Chips New Favorite, KALE CHIPS - WOW!!! 

Never believed these could taste good at all - they are TERRIFIC! Use kitchen shears to cut the kale off the stem and cut the leaves into bite-size pieces (discard the stems). Then arrange the pieces in one layer on a baking sheet (I lined mine with parchment paper), drizzle olive oil over them and then sea salt (Kroger sells in a salt shaker size grinder) grind it right over the cookie sheet. Baked on the top shelf of the oven (350 degrees) for about 4 minutes (tips start to turn brown, crinkle. YUM!! Then I scooped them off the parchment paper, dropped onto paper towel to soak up an excess olive oil. WOW!!!! I LOVE these! Just melt in your mouth. You have to try...

Lebanese Salad

5 Tomatoes chopped
1 Cucumber chopped
1-2 Bunches green onions with tops chopped
1-2 lemons Juiced
2 Bunches fresh parsley finely chopped
1-2 Tablespoon minced garlic
Mint for garnish add more if you want it in the salad
Sea salt to taste
Olive oil optional

Normally they put Bulgar wheat in this salad but I can't find it in my area. It makes this salad very healthy.

Garden Duties! How Lucky Are We?

On Sunday, Joe and I had a quick cup of coffee and talked about our garden duties, i.e. weeding the raised beds, planting new perennials, mulching, rearranging pots, picking lettuce, painting boxes, adding more dirt and mulch to the potatoes (yes, folks they grow up not down) and with that complete, starting up the new barbecue. It was delicious, grilled chicken shish kabob and veggies – accompanied with a fresh salad from the garden. We worked from 7:30 until 5:30, the weather perfect for staying out all day. It wasn’t too hot, overly humid and mildly overcast – the sun just peeking out here and there, allowing us to be comfortable while doing the work.

We bought some wonderful plants from the Farmers Market in Mount Clemens on Saturday. Joe and I wanted to add more flowering plants to encourage the more activity from the dwindling bee community not to mention the Monarchs which love to stop by on their long migratory routes. The lily pad flowers are blooming in the pond while the plants that look like huge petaled umbrellas are spreading out even further than last year. (I don’t know the name as our neighbor just dropped them off one day). Speaking of gifted plants, our friends the Victorys, brought a rare plant called, Little Brown Jug (wild ginger) from Tennessee that loves the shade along with some cool looking bamboo. We already have bamboo growing but I love it and thrilled to have more.  After living in the Northwest and seeing so much bamboo, I developed quite a love affair with it that stays with me today.

The garden is such a reminder of what it takes to produce something worthwhile. The responsibility that falls upon the shoulders of the gardener to participate in a cohesive way so that all is ecologically balanced – giving as much as you are taking. The earth reminds us that she is here for us, if we care just a little bit. We have had to walk our walk this year as we don’t have any help so it’s up to us. But we are managing and instead of thinking about what we have to do and stressing about it, we have chosen to look at it as a co-creation with the earth. Doing the best that we can when we can. And because it is incredibly collaborative, we have understood that the effort and love we put into the garden, more than equals what we get back.

So when I tell people about the size of the garden, many times their comment is “Wow, that must mean a lot of work!”  My reply, “Yep, if we’re lucky.”

From My Garden to Yours

Where should you get your worms this year?

Every compost should have ‘em!

This is my favorite  http://www.unclejimswormfarm.com

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Time to Order Your Plants and Seeds

For your seeds – Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds
The absolute best!

Most of you know that while I love to grow heirloom / open-pollinated vegetables, my passion lies in the finding of new varieties steeped in history. A good friend of mine owns Michigan Heirlooms. We get all of our tomato, lettuce and pepper plants from her. Her stuff is amazing!!!! Over the past winter, she has acquired over 400 new varieties - from many different countries - bringing her total collection to just under 600 varieties. She will be growing each and every variety this year in her garden. Due to limited space and shortness of seed supply, she can't list the new ones in the catalog. However, there will be plenty of extras..... I highly encourage you to click the 'Grower's Choice' button in any of the different categories -- you won't be disappointed!
 
Grow in good health,

Karen Golden
Owner / Grower
248-343-1976
www.MichiganHeirlooms.com