Thoughts on the Plot: My Community Garden Life in 2023

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Once again, I had too much going on in my life to make as big of a dent in my Mt Tabor Community Garden space as I’d hoped I’d be able to this season. But, so far, I’ve been harvesting quite a bit from the few plants I was able to get into the ground. Additionally, I’ll have a lot more in the coming weeks as the seeds I sowed late in the season are coming along well.

Then there are the established plants. You see, in this plot, I use the no till method. Weeds are pulled and mostly composted in the plot. Sometimes I use the green bins, but not as often as I did before. Now I just bury debris for the most part. Cover crops are used. But I don’t till the soil. I just add to it: compost, mulch, organic fertilizer, and sometimes burlap.

So all is not lost. It never is, and you just keep going, and sowing, in my case. Tomorrow I will go to purchase more seed starting mix, and I’ll pick up some organic compost and manure too. Those just get added on top as I go and things seem to be going well—but it took a few years.

And it still needs plenty of attention. There is no easy low-maintenance anything in the garden. I don’t care what you’ve read online. This takes work, lots of glorious work, and the happier you are, the lighter it will feel. Making yourself lower maintenance, and your own needs higher priority, is the only way. I feel much lighter now, and gardening hasn’t felt this great in a long time.

This season I got around to cleaning things up late. As is usual, I received an email about the state of my plot, so I asked for help from two well-seasoned veggie gardening fiends, oops, I mean friends. Theo came to help me weed a bit after Evan and I smothered everything with a bale of straw. Many smothering jokes were made as we giggled and tossed the stuff in the air and I may have rolled around in it just since I seem like someone who’d know what a roll in the hay is, but to be honest, rolling in the straw, in the warmth of the sun, pretty much just made me want to nap like a cat. (My plot is in the middle in the photo on the right.) Maybe this is also just a sign that I’ve eased into middle age. I sure do cherish naps more than I ever have in my entire life.

Not long after Theo helped me clean things up Evan and I returned together again to plant some mums. They’re special selections for tea and are hardy, but Evan no longer wanted to keep them in containers at their apartment. That evening we enjoyed the antics of this feline who was owned by an unhoused individual who was parked nearby. Evan and I discussed ways to add value to my space by growing things that are impossible to find, or else just plain expensive.

I kind of vowed to myself to be a bit more daring in some of my choices going forward.

Regularly I bring home food now, and I carefully pose the produce for photos before chopping it up to eat. The plot continues to run a bit wild. Now that I’ve moved on from my job at Cistus Nursery, one of the goals I hope to continue to work on is the plot. This year I’m sowing additional fall crops for the first time. It’s exciting to me to try new things, to grow new skills, and to observe familiar plants in new ways.

I really enjoy growing food.

So this last week, during a heat wave, I started to sow crops of seeds for planting, and I’ve been able to select out packets of seeds I plan to plant in the ground ASAP. I need to weed more, I need to prune, I want to cut back the rhubarb and do something with it. I love my squash, and I eat all of the tomatoes each time I water as I pop them into my mouth with chive blossoms. I love the curly kale, and I pick a handful of leaves each visit. The summer squash is prolific, but I need to get a harvest basket so it won’t make my arms itch after I carry it to the car. Oh, and the basil! Oh how I love its fragrance! Pesto is in my future, lots of it, and with my new seed fridge, I can fill the freezer with more Ann-safe food to keep me healthy.


So, there are many veggies I still purchase, but their cost does make my efforts worthwhile. I just wish I’d planned this all better to be more productive—and yet, it’s very productive and I’m really happy. The plot is a small space, but I do what I can with it, and I look forward to seeing more and more being harvested in the coming weeks and months. It’s truly a gift right now, and I love the surprises it shares with me.

April 2018, a Month of Action!

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IMG_1815Highlights from last April include the publication of this piece I wrote for the HPSO (Hardy Plant Society of Oregon) Bulletin.

There was also a much needed trip to the coast. I was able to walk in the ocean a bit, and later I ate some fresh oysters. I also got to see the alder tree at Dad’s house that had fallen into the river during the winter.

A few plants were purchased. At the annual Portland Orchid Society sale I found an Anthurium scherzerianum ‘Rothchildianum’. At another local plant sale I discovered Iris ‘Kinky Boots’. At my Gesneriad Society group I was able to get some seeds. At Hortlandia I volunteered at one of the HPSO booths and I bought the new edition of the PNW butterfly book by Robert Micheal Pyle.

Back at Cistus Nursery there was much going on. Year round there are plants blooming but in April things really begin to take off. We still had Aristolochia californica going and the Trillium kurbayashii were showing their beauty in the garden border. The Gasteria glomerata you see blooming was likely the one at Sean’s old house but these bloom off an on at work in the greenhouses. They’re one of my favorites. Preparations were made for seed germination. I continue to learn as the months tick by. There is still so much to learn and there are so many seeds out there to germinate. I propagated some Bergenia ciliata, and sniffed the most gentle of Mahonia. I potted up a Claytonia parviflora ssp. (I think) and that Ceanothus arboreus ‘Powder Blue’! Wow! Wow! Wowzers!

The garden at home suffered a bit due to my busy schedule. The Eccrecarpus bloomed all winter. The Darlingtonia californica found a perfect home. The front area of the house was still a mess. (Much as it is now. I just cannot tame that area.) Geranium phaeum ‘Sambor’ continued to impress. The Dodecatheon I’ve had for years continued to bulk up and the community garden plot definitely needed some love after months of neglect.

Lastly, there were the cats. Oliver really started to enjoy his spot on the back roof overlooking the living willow area, and Felix finally got to get out on his leash a bit. For the first time he visited the nursery while a group of us were on a plant-shopping field trip BEFORE Hortlandia. Yeah, I know, I’m bad! I don’t think I bought anything that day—or did I? A shout out to meeting an online friend too for the first time. Jason Chen is a designer and wonderful person who lives down in SoCal. I had no idea I’d be seeing him in Portland for Hortlandia and imagine my surprise when Felix jumped into his lap and fell asleep.

Last April was a really fun month.