Welcome

Roots of Happiness is about gardening the easy way. I write about anything and everything that has to do with making life in the garden easier and more enjoyable. So you will find tips and tricks and even a bit of serious information gleaned from my playing in the garden.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Winter Dreaming

Winter is a time of dreaming.  When it gets cold and gray, it is just natural to think of  lazy days on the beach or barbequing in the backyard and spring fashions in glorious colors.  For gardeners a certain madness takes over.  Winter dreaming brings visions of a day warm enough to get out and clear away the ravages of winter and dig in the earth.  Then come visions of iris season, azalea season, beautiful roses, drifts of daffodils, fruit trees in full bloom, peas and squash ready to be picked.

Catalog Fever is at its peak in Winter.  I go to my computer and search seed catalogs, plant catalogs, rose catalogs; and send for a paper copy.  Online is okay; but to have that paper catalog in my hands, now that is heaven.  I stash them everywhere--briefcase, tool box, purse.  Stash them in a desk drawer and under the seat of my vehicle.  I put sticky notes on my favorite pages.  Long hours are spent studying them and there are many quick peeks.

My idea of paradise is to order everything I want!  If I had an unlimited budget and a large number of acres at my disposal, I would be in business.  I don't, so I have to make some choices.

I have found a few questions that help me decide what to buy.

What do I reallly like?   What does my family enjoy eating?  Do I want colorful flowers in the landscape and to bring into the house?  Do I prefer a green landscape?  Do I need a living screen for privacy?  Do I have space for a big, shade tree, or do I need a smaller tree to fit a small yard?  What am I curious about?  What do I want to grow just for the fun of it?

How much sun does my garden receive?  I spend some time observing the patterns of sun, shade and filtered shade.  I make it a long term project though the year and keep notes.  Some flowers need six hours or more of direct sun to bloom well.  Others need morning sun and the protection of afternoon shade in the heat of summer. Where I live, the two most popular lawn grasses require a minimum of six hours of direct sun, otherwise they just fade away.

How much water is available?  Water rationing is a reality of summer gardening most years for me and a critical consideration in chosing what to put in the garden.

How much time and energy do I have to maintain the garden?  Am I going to be willing to pick beans once or twice a day for the duration of bean season?  Do I want to do what it takes to care  for hybrid roses?  Do I enjoy pruning the shrubbery several times a season?

How much space is available?  I am the empress of  "I'll work it in."  Hint:  Planting two pecan trees in the back yard of a 50'x100' lot does not work, and if I am going to grow anything else I don't need eight packages of different kind of sunflower seeds.

What is my gardening budget?  Ah, money.  Sometimes it is limited funds that save the gardener from him or herself.  Order what fits the budget for the year.  Consider the other expenses involved beyond seeds and plants--water, fertilizer, equipment, helpers, canning jars, sugar, etc.  How much garden bounty do I want to can?  How much freezer space is available?

Making a sketch of the garden helps decide what I will welcome into the garden.  Even a rough sketch on the back of an envelope helps.  I want to leave a bit of room for the treasures that usually come my way from family, friends, plant sales and curbside finds.

Good News.  Catalog Fever goes away pretty much once I can actually get out and dig in the dirt!  (Until next year.)

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

I am so excited about learning to blog.  Recently my nephew was telling me about the joys and challenges of creating a website and blog at his work.  As he concluded he said "If you know anything you would like to talk about, I think you would have fun blogging."  If I know anything?  Instantly I had a list longer than I could ever do.  So I had to narrow it down, and gardening came out in first place.

I had heard people talk about blogging, but it seemed too difficult and faraway for me to attempt.  I was hopelessly stuck in the 20th century!

So I took my courage in hand, sat down at my computer and entered "Gardening blogs" for a search.  Five hours later I felt like I had been on a vacation tour of gardens around the world.  I had met the most delightful people from all over the United States, Canada, the UK, Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, and...  well, you get the picture.  I felt like I had made new friends around the world, and we all shared the same interest--digging in the dirt and being a part of the mystery and adventure of growing a garden.  I was more than hooked; I was addicted.

I was impressed and enchanted with the passion and dedication of gardeners who were trying a container garden for the first time.  Then there were the experienced gardeners who were extolling the virtues of their favorite veggies, fruits, bulbs, methods of propagation and on and on.  I was mesmerized with the photographs and creativity of each blog--one had leggo people who lived in her tiny balcony garden--several had kept meticulous records of their fruit and vegetable harvests--another was experimenting with growing vegetables in deep shade in London. 

I had found my people!!!

So if you have a small flowerpot on your doorstep or windowsill or several acres--Welcome.  If you have never grown anything but mold in the refrigerator; but you are thinking maybe, perhaps, you might some day want to grow a plant or two or if you have vast gardening experience--Welcome.  If you have degrees in horticulture or landscape architecture and would like to be part of a gardening conversation with ordinary gardeners--Welcome.

I ran across this quote that has had meaning for me and expresses my intentions for Roots of Happiness

If you want to be happy for an hour,
Have a party.
If you want to be happy for a week,
Kill your pig and eat it.
But if you want to be happy all your life,
Become a gardener.
             Chinese Saying

Why the name Roots of Happiness?   Because one of the things that nourishes my spirit and my life is gardening, and its roots go deep in me.  When I garden, think gardening, talk gardening or dream gardening, I get happy.

I am glad you stopped by, and I hope you will come again and often and share the happiness.

(In Texas speak) "Y'all come back again soon now.  Ya hear?"