Monday, April 17, 2017

Grandma's 80th - April in Eronga!


GLAD TO BE IN MEXICO AGAIN
by David Farrelly (the bamboo poet)

Well, I board a bus in Frisco for the border,
in Mexicali, catch the evening train…
Now we’re sliding out the station
to glide across the nation,
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again!

#(chorus) I’m glad to be, I’m glad to be,
Glad to be in Mexico again!

That Baja is mighty bald and dusty,
and Sonora sure could use a year of rain;
but with a little practice
some can learn to love that cactus,
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again!
#
Oh, the train was in the station in Los Mochis
and I was in the baño for the men,
when this gringo with a goatee
up and offered me peyote
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again.
#
Left the train to bus down to the beaches
past a town in Nayarit named Matanchen.
And I met a dozen locos
on the Playa de Los Cocos,
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again!
#
Well, I aint some Holy Pope or Dalai Lama –
a common mortal dwells beneath my skin.
and I met this sizzling mama
frying fish in Aticama,
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again!
#
I see lights of fishing boats out on the ocean,
light in the east means dawn is coming in…
and the surf’s long crashing motion
has been such a moonlit lotion,
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again!
#
When I was born, God meant to make a gringo,
and I think he nearly managed with my brain.
But I've got a Latin heart
beating in me from the start,
God, I’m glad to be in Mexico again.
#
Well, you may not know tortillas from sombreros;
don’t forget amigo is the word for "friend".
Then when you get back home I reckon
ties’ll bind but beans’ll beckon
and you’ll long to be in Mexico again.











                                             

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Spring Sprouts + Tomato Trials


Now, in early April, the vegetable gardens in the Pacific Northwest are coming to life. My peas are a few inches tall and starting to climb their trellises. Fruit trees are budding, rhubarb is sprouting, and salad greens that were started in greenhouses and cold frames are ready to be planted outside. This is the end of "the hungry stretch" - the months in late Winter and early Spring when supplies of squash, potatoes and canned harvests from the Fall are running low, but the new Spring growth hasn't produced much besides the occasional salad garnish. Now it is time to hunt slugs, prepare beds, and select the most promising starts to be transplanted.

Below: mustard greens from a variety mix


Below: lettuce starts from seed saved from last years mix


Below: trays of starts in the greenhouse



Here is the Pacific Northwest our long, cool spring is fantastic for salad and peas, but we have to plan ahead for good yields in Summer gardens. The most needy vegetables are the Solanum family - tomatoes, tomatillos, eggplants, and peppers. In the Pacific Northwest we need to start our Solanums early. This year I started peppers in January and tomatoes in March.

I decided to run some trials to find the best potting soil. My three finalists this year were:
A) Soil Blocks (compressed blocks of peat/compost/fertilizer that require no plastic pot)
B) Deluxe Mix
     1/2 Compost
     1/4 Peat/Coconut Fiber
     1/8 Vermiculite
     1/8 Perlite
C) Budget Mix
     1/2 Soil
     1/4 Perlite/Sand
     1/4 Peat/Coconut Fiber
     +Fertilizer

Left: Fertilizer and ingredients to be mixed.   Right: Three growth media.



Each variety will have six starts (two in each mix). varieties range from Italian paste tomatoes to dark Russian tomatoes to little wild tomatoes from Grandma and Grandpa's yard from their first spot in Morelos.

All of these tomatoes will be grown in my deluxe indoor grow machine - a chamber lined with reflective foil on wheels that grows plants on heating blankets under LED lights with 18 volt fans to promote air circulation. The entire system is on a timer - the only human interaction required is watering and fertilizing. This may sound a little too mechanized, but daily care of 126 plants for 3 months is a bit overwhelming.

Below: Pepper starts were already a few months old when tomatoes were started.


Below: Tomatoes today


Below: Soil trial results! L: Budget Center: Blocks R: Deluxe


As evident in the photo above, results were very clear. The Budget mix was superior to the more expensive Deluxe mix, which has more ingredients but no fertilizer, and to the Soil Blocks, which dried out quickly and had a very high seedling mortality rate. I was happy to see that ordinary garden soil can grow great tomatoes by simply: ensuring proper drainage and retention (with Perlite/Sand and Peat/Coconut Fiber) and providing proper nutrients (with powdered organic fertilizer and applications of fish fertilizer).

I'm happy to share a bit of what I've learned so far this spring. I hope that it proves useful. Much love to all of my beautiful and talented relations. 

-Ben











Saturday, April 1, 2017

A poem for Jasper and Jenny

On Children

Your children are not your children.
They are the sons and daughters of Life's longing for itself.
They come through you but not from you,
And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.
You may give them your love but not your thoughts, 
For they have their own thoughts.
You may house their bodies but not their souls,
For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, 
which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.
You may strive to be like them, 
but seek not to make them like you.
For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.

You are the bows from which your children
as living arrows are sent forth.
The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite, 
and He bends you with His might 
that His arrows may go swift and far.
Let your bending in the archer's hand be for gladness;
For even as He loves the arrow that flies, 
so He loves also the bow that is stable.

- Kahlil Gibran