During a trip to Cuba in January of 2024 it was discovered that the picturesque photos you see of Cuba, is not the real Cuba. The real Cuba is very different from how everything appears on the surface. It is a country full of extremes and contrasts. The one phrase that best sums up Cuba is: It’s Complicated.
Urban farming, travel, growing enough food to last year round. Whatever you think this is... it's probably not that...
Sunday, March 31, 2024
Sunday, March 17, 2024
10 Fantastical Things Learned from the Garden - 2024 Vibes
"It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop."
- Confucius
Pondering things learned |
Apparently I'm on a two year cycle of writing a new top 10 things learned article. The first one was in 2020 and the second in 2022 and now the third is upon us. No intro is really needed so alas here is latest and greatest, top 10 fantastical things learned from the garden:
1. Stay on top of the weeds and they will go away with time. Weeds are indicative of a soil health issue plus the ground does not want to be bare. If you have bare ground, weeds will grow - this is the earth trying to heal itself. If you plant something and weeds grow instead, you've got a soil health problem. There are two main approaches to weed control 1) obsessively try and pull every single weed or 2) let the weeds grow a little bit, then right when the seed heads start forming just cut the seed heads off, when your ready for the entire weed to be gone, just cut it off at the base and let the body of the weed decompose back into the soil. This makes the weed spend all of its energy into growing then it can't reproduce so over time your weed problem goes away. Keep an eye out for useful weeds - such as dandelions - which you can eat, make wine out of, or a hand balm, etc. Just because it's considered a weed doesn't mean it's useless. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
2. You do not know everything despite what you think you already know. Not even close. Approach every day in the garden with a mindset of "I know nothing, what can the garden teach me today?" Do that and you will learn an immense amount every single day. The garden / nature has a infinite amount of wisdom it's willing to share with you... if you are willing to listen.
3. There is such a thing as too much compost. Compost is jam packed with nutrients. If you are producing a high amount of compost and you have a somewhat small growing area, it is certainly possible to add too much compost and overload the ground with nutrients that the plants then can't absorb. Too much of a good thing... is a thing.
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