Garden Delights

I think spring crops are the most delightful to anticipate.  The ground is tilled, ready for planting.  After I sow those first seeds in the ground, the garden looks so bare and brown.  I need to mark the rows with stakes so I know where the rows are until the first green appears.  Some of the green leaves are also weeds but an experienced eye can tell the difference.

This was taken on May 14 about 6 weeks after it was planted.
15 days later and everything has grown!  I love harvesting lettuce, spinach, radishes, and onions.

There are spring onions, longer season onions, several kinds of lettuce, radishes and spinach which all provide a tasty fresh garden salad.  Writing this stirs up a desire to gather some of these vitamin and mineral rich super foods!

The red potatoes are at the top of the picture.  In between the straw, there are rows of beets, carrots, kale, and Swiss chard. Underneath the straw, there is a layer of newspaper for weed control.  These veggies will need several weeks to mature before harvesting, although young beet and chard leaves are great in a salad.

This is a special garden.  There is joy in the morning.  The winter is past. I have renewed vitality and vision.   There is newness in this garden because naturally, spring is here and physically my body has new strength.

The lettuce and cabbage plants are growing.  The cabbage had a little setback after a furious wind and rain storm had them leaning but their roots held firm.  The small tomato plants didn’t fare as well.  Their stalks were broken off and they were lying flat on the ground because they had just been planted and had not developed a root system.  The birds had also been helping themselves to parts of the plants, poor things.  So thankfully I was able to buy six more plants to replace them.

This sounds like the parable Jesus told.  There was a gardener who scattered his seeds.  Some of the seeds fell on hard packed ground and the birds ate them.  The seeds that fell on the rocky soil were fine until the roots tried to go deeper but as the sun became hotter there was no soil for them to go deeper.  The seeds that fell in what seemed like nice soil  grew up and were fine until the weeds and thorns grew faster and took all the moisture and choked the plants.  Last of all, the seeds on the good ground grew and became vigorous plants that produced a crop.

Jesus explained the parable like this.  The seed is the Word of God. The soil is like our hearts. When we hear or read the Bible it can be compared to the seeds that are sown.  If we have unbelief and bitterness it can be like hard ground and Satan can come and steal the word because faith cannot enter.

Jesus said those with rocky soil receive the word with joy but when problems come or there is persecution for believing God’s word the seeds of faith die.

The third soil looks good, the seeds sprout, and the plants look great until the worries of life, the lure of riches, and desires for other things crowd out  the truth.  So there is no fruit.  In my garden, plants that have been choked by weeds might still be alive among the weeds but they are small and not healthy looking and they don’t yield anything.  Maybe that person still says they follow God but they don’t have any fruit and they are weak in their faith.

The good soil is the person who hears the word.  They believe what God says is true.  Faith is mixed with the word of truth which produces a crop of righteousness and good fruit which can be shared.

God delights in seeing His kingdom growing and producing fruit.  We have the privilege of having a relationship with the Master Gardener who has vision for our lives in our new seasons of life.

Happy Place

My grandson’s happy place is being on the farm.  Even though he is too young to verbalize these thoughts, his mother knows how he loves to wonder around the yard, watch the tractors do their work, or try pulling a cat’s tail as they brush against his legs.  He is obviously content in this outdoor space.

Many of us have a happy place and mine is my garden.  As I was hanging up laundry on the wash line which borders the garden, I happily observed this piece of earth.  Nothing picture worthy but full of potential.

The lettuce and spinach needed harvesting again and I could not wait to take the kitchen shears and my basket and start snipping.  Lettuces love this cool rainy weather so it helps me to appreciate the days when the sun isn’t shining and the sky is gray and cloudy.

This photo was taken Tuesday afternoon. The garden looks kind of unkempt and the weeds keep prospering in any kind of weather!

The spring garden tilling for the season needed to be accomplished by my farmer husband but there were fields of corn and soybeans that needed to be planted.  The seeds and veggie plants had to wait until the ground had dried out again.  Tilling the ground while it is too wet can cause the soil to become compacted.

Saturday afternoon the roto tiller and the operator made an appearance in the garden!! Good bye weeds….hello beautiful soil.

After much grace and patience waiting for the rains to stop, finally, on Saturday, the ground appeared dry enough to use the tiller.  My husband had to use the weed eater to chop down all those flourishing weeds before tilling.

Happily, I retrieved the garden plan (hopefully that will be another post).  I gathered my supplies: the bucket in which I keep the seeds, a hoe, a string to make straight rows, a tape measure, and the seedlings which have been patiently waiting on the porch.

First, I stood and surveyed the area, deciding exactly where the planting should begin.  The tomatoes, peppers, and basil needed to be put in the ground.  The holes were dug and redug until they were in the right spots.  My husband stated that I looked so happy doing this.  I worked until the sun was going down around 8:15.  My dear husband was such a blessing as he gathered the stakes for the tomatoes and then hammered them into the ground.  He was even kind enough to take these pictures.

Placing the dirt around the pepper plant. The owl is keeping watch to hopefully prevent the starlings from pulling out the plants.

There are many places where I find fulfillment and contentment here on this earth but I am looking forward to another place that Jesus is preparing.  When Jesus walked on this earth, He told his disciples that he was going to leave them.  This was a very troubling thought to them.  Walking side by side with Jesus was their happy place.  His reply was, “In my Father’s house are many dwelling places…and I go to prepare a place for you…and I will come again…that where I am, there you may be also.”*

Thomas was concerned that he didn’t know where Jesus was going and how to get there.  The answer Jesus gave was one which I hold onto today.  “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.”

So no matter the place where we are, being with Jesus is the most satisfying and fulfilling place to be.

*John 14:1-3