Monday, February 12, 2018

Dad's Garden

My Dad loved a garden.  He once told me that he acquired his love of all things growing, from his Mother.  When his older siblings were busy with the daily chores of running a farm, the youngest children spent time in the garden with his Mother, where he learned about planting and growing and harvesting.  I think part of it was that he just enjoyed spending time with his Mother.

When I was growing up, my family lived in a series of small, rental houses.  If a landlord permitted, Dad would dig up a small corner of the back lawn and plant tomatoes and potatoes, along with a few other vegetables.  In the mid 1950's when he was finally able to purchase a 20 acre hobby farm that had space for a large garden, Dad was in gardeners heaven.

Dad, my little sister and me in Dad's garden.


Dad poured over the seed catalogs, making lists of the vegetables he wanted to plant.  He planted all the standard vegetables - sweet corn, green and yellow beans, peas, carrots, beets, etc.  But then the fun began.  He would try something new every year.  Once he planted peanuts that were a dismal failure.  The plants came up, but the Minnesota growing season just wasn't long enough to produce the peanuts.  Another time he ordered blue seed potatoes.  These grew well and yielded a good crop of potatoes that really were blue in color.  Sadly, when cooked, they turned a disgusting gray color that nobody was interested in eating.

The 'giant pumpkins' gave us some large jack-o-lanterns, but none grew as big as advertised.  His rousing success was popcorn.  The ears were small, and when the plants turned brown in the fall, Dad picked all the ears, spread them out on old window screens, held up by two sawhorses, on the front porch, and left them there to dry.  We shelled the cobs and excitedly tested the popcorn by popping a batch.  We were not disappointed.

Dad added a small strawberry bed and a long row of raspberries.  Both did well, although we rarely had enough to use for jam or to freeze.  He didn't seem to mind, however, when he would catch us picking and eating the berries as fast as they would ripen.

One of my fondest memories is of grabbing a salt shaker and heading to the tomato patch with Dad.  We would sit on the ground, surrounded by tomatoes and eat until we couldn't any more.

During that time I joined the local 4-H club.  Each member had 'projects' for the year, usually ending with county fair exhibits.  Many of the kids raised cows or pigs or sheep to show at the fair, but because we weren't a regular farm and had not the means to care for animals, my main projects were sewing and gardening.  Those with a gardening project exhibited their best vegetables at the fair, and there was also a 'garden tour' held by the club to look at the various gardens in the neighborhood.  That meant that the garden had to be really spiffy with no weeds in sight.  After a year or two, I finally caught on and asked Dad if he encouraged me to garden for the love of raising food or if he just wanted free labor to keep the garden free of weeds.

He just smiled!

12 comments:

  1. I love this post Vicki! What great memories and photos.

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    1. Thanks, Jenn. There are many good memories tied up in just those two photos. They are the only ones I have of Dad and his garden, and I cherish them.

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    1. Yes they are, Gorges. I want to get them down before my memory fades away.

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  3. Daddy planted a garden every year. I hated working in them because the green growing made me itch. I begged not to go and promised mama I would wash the dishes and mop the floor. I was only seven and she saved me from the garden by convincing daddy to let me work in the house and she would work in the garden. She said she enjoyed being in the garden. I thought she said it to save me. But, she was stuck in the house all day and after dinner with dishes for a family of six. So, now I truly believe she did love the garden. She worked in their small garden during the Depression. Now, I love to grow things. I just take care not to let anything touch me. If it does, I go inside and wash my arm or hands. I do wear gloves and sleeves and long pants, but sometimes, green touches me. I remember all the wonderful tomatoes we enjoyed in the summer and the canned ones in the winter.

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    1. Linda...I'm pretty sure your mother was happy to be outside in the garden. I know that when I was raising my family, I was the happiest when I could be outside in my garden.

      I have been lucky that the only plants that bother me are stinging nettles and poison ivy. Good thing, as I have always loved being outside digging in the dirt, watching the garden grow. Even pulling weeds did not bother me and I loved the produce from the garden. The tomatoes were really good, but cucumbers and green peas, eaten raw right from the garden, were the best!!

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  4. I love these stories and the photos.

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    1. Son...I'm glad you enjoy these stories about your grandparents. I have a few more ready to publish.

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  5. Love the photos. And the story. That was some garden your Dad had.
    My first garden memory - mom taking a marker and drawing a line on my finger. Then she sat me down in the middle of one planter in the dirt, gave me a a packet of seeds and told me to plant each seed as deep as the line on my finger. I was 5 or so.
    My mom encouraged kids to play in the dirt!
    Woke up to snow on the ground. Am cozy under my fleece blanket, on the recliner, dog snuggled underneath snoring.
    Cheers, SJ

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    1. SJ...That was the largest garden Dad ever had with the exception of the one his mother grew to feed their family. It was big enough so we could have vegetables to eat fresh and still have enough to can. Part of my love of that garden was the enjoyment of planting and watching things grow. The rest was the time spent in the garden with my Dad.

      What a great way to teach a child how to plant seeds. I think we were both blessed to have parents who encouraged us to 'play in the dirt.'

      No snow here. We are having a heat wave this week with temps in the thirties and maybe reaching 40 later this week. Enjoy your snuggle. I can just picture you and the dog and the fleece blanket. And the snores!

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  6. Another fine post. My grandma had a garden alone the sunny side of the house. She planted tomatoes that I remember. I think radishes and maybe cucumbers. One year my dad went up to Rush City, (his side are farmers) and brought home a large amount of manure. After that was tilled in that year she had tomatoes and share she did to anyone who wanted any. My folks didn't seem to do much gardening at all. We tried last year,it was so so, but we are doing it again this year.

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    1. Rob...I wonder if people didn't garden so much when they lived in town. Dad didn't garden much until we moved to the country.

      I think if I could grow only one thing, it would be tomatoes. Home grown always taste so much better than store bought. I love that your grandma gave away so many of her tomatoes. Folks shared like that years ago, didn't they.

      Glad you are giving your garden another go this year. Even if it doesn't produce a lot, everything you can grow is less you have to buy, and that is a good thing.

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