Category: Everything Else

  • Small Space, Low Budget Gardening Tips (Lessons learned from the Flower Show)

    Small Space, Low Budget Gardening Tips (Lessons learned from the Flower Show)

    small space low cost gardening

     

    I love spring anywhere,
    but if I could choose I would always greet it in a garden.
    ―Ruth Stout

    Oooohhh it’s that time of year again. And even though I’ve been told I’m not allowed to garden this year due to my repeated inability to bring a veggie garden to fruition… I’ve got that yearning. To get my hands dirty. To plant seeds and make great plans.

    Gardening is the purest form of optimism. It’s the embodiment of hope.

    Anyway, at the Philadelphia Flower Show there was an exhibit by the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society that I found hugely inspirational. Look how many herbs, fruits and veggies they managed to cram into a space about the size of a typical city rowhome backyard! Is that corn?

    It’s a beautiful illustration of how you don’t need a lot of land and a ton of money to grow your own produce: enough to make a difference in your diet (and likely your neighbors’ diets as well).

    Small Space, Low Budget Gardening Tips
    (Lessons learned from the Flower Show)

     

    1. Raised beds rock the house.

    The picture above has raised beds (and a walkway made with boards and a seat made of part of a tree trunk). Raised beds mean you don’t have to go digging down into your dirt and then amend it; you can start off with good, clean, well-balanced dirt to give your plants an extra boost.

    2. Think inside the box. Or bell jar.

    Cold frames and glass jars help protect from nips of frost, extending your growing season.

     

    cold frame

     

    3. Look up, down, and all around. 

    Vertical gardening is an awesome technique to increase your square yardage for growing (and ultimately increasing your yield). Think trellises, wooden pallets to make walls of plants, archways, cages.

     

    tomato trellis
    Cherry tomatoes grown on a simple archway
    lettuce wall
    Wall made of lettuce!

     

    4. Gardening doesn’t need to be fancy. 

    Beds neatly hemmed in by logs. Oyster shells to create a pathway. Cages made from thin branches. Those wooden paint stirrers from hardware stores as row markers. Seats made from tree stumps. Used wooden pallets. Old windows for cold frames. Produce section twist ties for supporting and training plants. Pretty much anything with a hollow center as a planter… this is recycling at its best, and gardening at its least expensive. Plus, I think using as many natural materials as possible makes a garden so pretty.

     

    small space veggie garden

    Garden accessories

     

    5. Seeds are cheap.

    Add love, time and effort and the return is bountiful. Freeze up your surplus for those winter months when the price of produce soars! (I was paying $3.99 A POUND for red peppers this winter! But I can buy a pepper plant for $2 at my farmers market.) Check out this breakdown of the most cost effective plants to grow— salad greens are #3 and soooo simple to grow yourself. Not to mention, way better tasting than salad-in-a-bag or trucked-in-from-afar!

    Share the wealth by planting a row for the hungry or checking with your local food kitchen to see if they’ll take garden donations. Turn your garden plot into a political statement.

    Garden for victory. For your health. For your kids. For your mental well-being. For your wallet.

     

    $10 of seeds...
    $10 of seeds = one ton of tomatoes

     

    Are you growing fruits, veggies, herbs in your garden this year?

    What are you planting?

     

     peppers

     

    Please excuse the quality of the Flower Show shots. I had to resort to my pop-up flash.

  • Targeting Children with Treats Infographic: Marketing to Children Sucks

    Targeting Children with Treats Infographic: Marketing to Children Sucks

    Seriously, it does. We realize this when our kids get the gimmes from the marketing machine alerting them what they need to ask for for Christmas, but we overlook the constant day-to-day bombardment of ads about foods.

    Interesting how cereals ads outnumber fast food ads by more than half. And while most people (I think) limit fast food meals to one a week or so, we give our kids cereal pretty much every day. It’s one of the foods that are easily mistaken for healthy, but the numbers don’t necessarily bear that out.

    We know that sweets aren’t good for kids, maybe we need to take a harder look at the nutritional value of the stuff they get all the time.

     

    childhood obesity infographic

    Brought to you by Teach.com and MAT@USC.

  • Leap Day! Leap ‘Round the Blogosphere

    Leap Day! Leap ‘Round the Blogosphere

    leap

    Don’t exist.
    Live.
    Get out, explore.
    Thrive.
    Challenge authority. Challenge yourself.
    Evolve.
    Change forever.

    Become who you say you always will. Keep moving. Don’t stop. Start the revolution. Become a freedom fighter. Become a superhero. Just because everyone doesn’t know your name doesn’t mean you don’t matter.

    Are you happy? Have you ever been happy? What have you done today to matter? Did you exist or did you live? How did you thrive?

    Become a chameleon— fit in anywhere. Be a rockstar— stand out everywhere. Do nothing, do everything. Forget everything, remember everyone. Care, don’t just pretend to. Listen to everyone. Love everyone and nothing at the same time. Its impossible to be everything, but you can’t stop trying to do it all.

    All I know is that I have no idea where I am right now. I feel like I am in training for something, making progress with every step I take. I fear standing still. It is my greatest weakness.

    I talk big, but often don’t follow through. That’s my biggest problem. I don’t even know what to think right now. It’s about time I start to take a jump. F*ck starting to take. Just jump— over everything.
    Leap.

    -Brian Krans, A Constant Suicide

     

    You get a bonus day this year.

    What will you do with it? How will you leap?

    ____________________________________

     

    leap day 2012Jessica at Found the Marbles invited me to take part in her Leap Around the Blogosphere. Answering some questions just for kicks and leaps— you should, too!

    My childhood nickname was:

    I’ve never had a nickname; most people don’t even call me by my actual name. I’m always sort of startled when I hear Robin. I’m more of a “hey, you! C’mere!”

    My mother used to call me the Devil Slut Child. Does that count?

    If you want to spoil me rotten, buy me a:

    macro lens. And a fisheye lens. And a good telephoto. And a tripod. I spent all my monies on the camera and all I could afford after was kit lenses. I swear the macro on my little Elph point and shoot was waaaay better (see yesterday’s post about 3 years of crocuses for visual confirmation).

    The television character I most identify with is:

    Jess (Zooey Deschanel) on New Girl. As I am also socially awkward, plus I think I’m funny and no one else seems to agree with me.

    If I had a whole day to go shopping and money to spend, I would go to:

    Anthropologie. I’d spend the whole day trying everything on and walk out with one dress, one pair of pants and ten tank tops. I love their clothes but my broad-shouldered man body doesn’t fit quite right in them.

    The most wild and crazy thing I have ever done (that I can admit to publicly) is:

    Hmmm… I am not really known for wild and crazy. Eccentric and mildly amusing, yes. I can think of a few things that fall under the heading of “drunk and stupid” but I’m not about to let my kids know about them… I guess it would be how back in the day, before kids, we’d just decide on the spur of the moment to go on a trip… Once we decided to drive to the beach during a snowstorm, just to see what the ocean looked like. We left at midnight, walked the beach and the boards, and were back in time for me to shower and be at work at 9am. Another time we drove to New Orleans and back in a 48 hour period. Just because. Now, if I want to run out to the bookstore there’s like 10 things I need to do before I leave the house.

    The one thing on my bucket list that I am most eager to do is:

    Learn to scuba dive and then go on a Cousteau expedition. First I need to learn to swim.

    My family will always be loyal to:

    the Polynesian at Disney World. We had a fantabulous time there and if’n we ever get to go back I’m not sure the kids (and Jeff, especially) would settle for a different resort.

    If I could spend a day with a celebrity I would choose:

    my celebrity BFF Justin Timberlake. But ideally it would be me and JT and David Letterman hanging out for a night on the town. The three of us? Fireworks. Johnny Knoxville could come along too if he asked nicely.

    In my opinion, the best invention in the history of the world is:

    the water heater. Sure, there are snazzier things in the world but do any of them compare with the joy of a hot shower after a tough workout or a cold winter’s day? I think not.

    When life hands me lemons, I make:

    Dang, somebody send me a whole CRATE of lemons and let’s have ourselves a party.

     

    Pick a question! Tell me your answer!

    Give me more lemon recipes for my party!