Happy Easter to all my garden friends! May your plants be full of =
beautiful
colored eggs and like seeds, grow beauty with love.
Happy Easter!
Donnna
in WA
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your plants
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Posted by Billy on April 4, 2010, 12:57 pm
> Happy Easter to all my garden friends! May your plants be full of > beautiful > colored eggs and like seeds, grow beauty with love. > > Happy Easter! > > Donnna > in WA
When gardeners garden, it is not just plants that grow,
but the gardeners themselves.
- Ken Druse
The soil temp is 60°F, we have a "go". Now, if I can just stay dry.
In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.
~ Margaret Atwood
--
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the
merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini.
Posted by Bill who putters on April 4, 2010, 2:07 pm
In article
> > > Happy Easter to all my garden friends! May your plants be full of > > beautiful > > colored eggs and like seeds, grow beauty with love. > > > > Happy Easter! > > > > Donnna > > in WA > > When gardeners garden, it is not just plants that grow, > but the gardeners themselves. > - Ken Druse > > The soil temp is 60°F, we have a "go". Now, if I can just stay dry. > > In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt. > ~ Margaret Atwood
Soils appeal to our senses, to our sight, touch, our sense of smell,
even taste. Hans Jenny (1999) admired soils for their intrinsic beauty:
I have seen so many delicate shapes, forms, and colours in soil profiles
that, to me, soils are beautiful. Whenever I offer this reaction to an
audience, I notice smiles and curiosity, but when I follow up with
slides that depict ebony black mollisols of Canada, titian-red oxisols
of Hawaii, and gorgeous soil-profile paintings by such famous artists as
Grant Wood of Iowa, Dubuffet of France, and Schmidt-Rottluff of Germany,
the hesitancy turns into applauseŠ. Soil-profile art is not akin to
classic paintings with themes; rather, it resembles abstract art: and if
you are used to thinking of soil as dirt, which is customary in our
society, you are not keyed to find beauty in it.
Soil tasting is an old practice to test whether soils are sweet or sour.
Roman farmers distilled soil through a wine strainer with water and
drank the liquor. ŒThe best soils had neither salinity nor bitterness,
but a sweet and open taste like the smell of fertile soil when it opens
in the spring¹ (Logan 1995:64). Many cultures practise geophagy, or soil
eating. A Siberian tribe carried small balls of local earth to nibble on
their travels to remind them of home. Central American native
communities ate clay tablets, Swedish and Finlanders used clay to extend
bread in famine times, while the Japanese Ainu people have a clay lump
soup. West African women eat earth processed by termites to obtain
calcium. Many of us take a kaolin-based mixture to settle upset stomachs
(Whole Earth 1999). Immunologists (Rook, Stanford 1998) think we need to
eat more dirt as children to build up our immune systems.
We don't smear dirt on our lips and inhale mycobacteria. We've broken
the bonds of tens of millions of years of coevoultion of dirt and
terrestrial-vertebrate immunology. Maybe it goes back even further. No
matter. Without early childhood contact with these agents in soil (and
unpurified water), with every flex of our First-World fetish for
cleanliness, fewer antigens enter into our bodies to rehearse the
ancient immunological troops. Without certain small diseases early in
life, we may have more allergies later (Whole Earth 1999).
Hans Jenny had a very sensual approach to the soil: ŒSoil appeals to my
senses. I like to dig in it and work it with my hands. I enjoy doing the
soil texture field test with my fingers or kneading a clay soil, which
is a short step from ceramics or sculpture. Soil has a pleasant smell. I
like to sit on bare, sun-drenched ground and take in the fragrance of
soil¹ (Jenny 1999). Many farmers and gardeners are enthralled by soil,
not only because it feels good but because it Œbrings us into
relationship with the primal forces of life and death, both physically
and symbolically. We nourish life from a seed, watch it grow, thrive,
spring full of colour and vitality, and then wither and die. This is the
natural order of things, of all life¹ (Johnson 2003).
--
Bill Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA
"I have always looked upon decay as being just as wonderful
and rich an expression of life as growth" Henry Miller
Posted by Billy on April 4, 2010, 2:28 pm
I find that a real gardener is not one who cultivates flowers, but one
who cultivates the soil
-- Karel Capek
> In article > > > > > > Happy Easter to all my garden friends! May your plants be full of > > > beautiful > > > colored eggs and like seeds, grow beauty with love. > > > > > > Happy Easter! > > > > > > Donnna > > > in WA > > > > When gardeners garden, it is not just plants that grow, > > but the gardeners themselves. > > - Ken Druse > > > > The soil temp is 60°F, we have a "go". Now, if I can just stay dry. > > > > In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt. > > ~ Margaret Atwood > > Ah the smell of soil and more. > > ................. > > http://www.regional.org.au/au/asssi/supersoil2004/keynote/lineskelly.htm > > Soils appeal to our senses, to our sight, touch, our sense of smell, > even taste. Hans Jenny (1999) admired soils for their intrinsic beauty: > I have seen so many delicate shapes, forms, and colours in soil profiles > that, to me, soils are beautiful. Whenever I offer this reaction to an > audience, I notice smiles and curiosity, but when I follow up with > slides that depict ebony black mollisols of Canada, titian-red oxisols > of Hawaii, and gorgeous soil-profile paintings by such famous artists as > Grant Wood of Iowa, Dubuffet of France, and Schmidt-Rottluff of Germany, > the hesitancy turns into applauseŠ. Soil-profile art is not akin to > classic paintings with themes; rather, it resembles abstract art: and if > you are used to thinking of soil as dirt, which is customary in our > society, you are not keyed to find beauty in it. > Soil tasting is an old practice to test whether soils are sweet or sour. > Roman farmers distilled soil through a wine strainer with water and > drank the liquor. ŒThe best soils had neither salinity nor bitterness, > but a sweet and open taste like the smell of fertile soil when it opens > in the spring¹ (Logan 1995:64). Many cultures practise geophagy, or soil > eating. A Siberian tribe carried small balls of local earth to nibble on > their travels to remind them of home. Central American native > communities ate clay tablets, Swedish and Finlanders used clay to extend > bread in famine times, while the Japanese Ainu people have a clay lump > soup. West African women eat earth processed by termites to obtain > calcium. Many of us take a kaolin-based mixture to settle upset stomachs > (Whole Earth 1999). Immunologists (Rook, Stanford 1998) think we need to > eat more dirt as children to build up our immune systems. > We don't smear dirt on our lips and inhale mycobacteria. We've broken > the bonds of tens of millions of years of coevoultion of dirt and > terrestrial-vertebrate immunology. Maybe it goes back even further. No > matter. Without early childhood contact with these agents in soil (and > unpurified water), with every flex of our First-World fetish for > cleanliness, fewer antigens enter into our bodies to rehearse the > ancient immunological troops. Without certain small diseases early in > life, we may have more allergies later (Whole Earth 1999). > Hans Jenny had a very sensual approach to the soil: ŒSoil appeals to my > senses. I like to dig in it and work it with my hands. I enjoy doing the > soil texture field test with my fingers or kneading a clay soil, which > is a short step from ceramics or sculpture. Soil has a pleasant smell. I > like to sit on bare, sun-drenched ground and take in the fragrance of > soil¹ (Jenny 1999). Many farmers and gardeners are enthralled by soil, > not only because it feels good but because it Œbrings us into > relationship with the primal forces of life and death, both physically > and symbolically. We nourish life from a seed, watch it grow, thrive, > spring full of colour and vitality, and then wither and die. This is the > natural order of things, of all life¹ (Johnson 2003).
--
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the
merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini.
Billy[_10_];882357']In article
b2forewagner-C3204C.14072304042010@news.supernews.com,
Bill who putters b2forewagner@snip.net wrote:
I find that a real gardener is not one who cultivates flowers, but one
who cultivates the soil
-- Karel Capek
-
In article
wildbilly-212EA9.09571304042010@c-61-68-245-199.per.connect.net.au,
Billy wildbilly@withouta.net wrote:
-
In article 4p0un.166048$2r7.109753@newsfe05.iad,
"Lelandite" bckwrds@q.com wrote:
-
Happy Easter to all my garden friends! May your plants be full
of
beautiful
colored eggs and like seeds, grow beauty with love.
Happy Easter!
Donnna
in WA-
When gardeners garden, it is not just plants that grow,*
but the gardeners themselves.*
-** Ken Druse
The soil temp is 60°F, we have a "go". Now, if I can just stay dry.
In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.
~ Margaret Atwood-
Ah the smell of soil and more.
................
http://tinyurl.com/6kqb4x
Soils appeal to our senses, to our sight, touch, our sense of smell,
even taste. Hans Jenny (1999) admired soils for their intrinsic
beauty:
I have seen so many delicate shapes, forms, and colours in soil
profiles
that, to me, soils are beautiful. Whenever I offer this reaction to an
audience, I notice smiles and curiosity, but when I follow up with
slides that depict ebony black mollisols of Canada, titian-red oxisols
of Hawaii, and gorgeous soil-profile paintings by such famous artists
as
Grant Wood of Iowa, Dubuffet of France, and Schmidt-Rottluff of
Germany,
the hesitancy turns into applauseŠ. Soil-profile art is not akin to
classic paintings with themes; rather, it resembles abstract art: and
if
you are used to thinking of soil as dirt, which is customary in our
society, you are not keyed to find beauty in it.
Soil tasting is an old practice to test whether soils are sweet or
sour.
Roman farmers distilled soil through a wine strainer with water and
drank the liquor. ŒThe best soils had neither salinity nor bitterness,
but a sweet and open taste like the smell of fertile soil when it opens
in the spring¹ (Logan 1995:64). Many cultures practise geophagy, or
soil
eating. A Siberian tribe carried small balls of local earth to nibble
on
their travels to remind them of home. Central American native
communities ate clay tablets, Swedish and Finlanders used clay to
extend
bread in famine times, while the Japanese Ainu people have a clay lump
soup. West African women eat earth processed by termites to obtain
calcium. Many of us take a kaolin-based mixture to settle upset
stomachs
(Whole Earth 1999). Immunologists (Rook, Stanford 1998) think we need
to
eat more dirt as children to build up our immune systems.
We don't smear dirt on our lips and inhale mycobacteria. We've broken
the bonds of tens of millions of years of coevoultion of dirt and
terrestrial-vertebrate immunology. Maybe it goes back even further. No
matter. Without early childhood contact with these agents in soil (and
unpurified water), with every flex of our First-World fetish for
cleanliness, fewer antigens enter into our bodies to rehearse the
ancient immunological troops. Without certain small diseases early in
life, we may have more allergies later (Whole Earth 1999).
Hans Jenny had a very sensual approach to the soil: ŒSoil appeals to my
senses. I like to dig in it and work it with my hands. I enjoy doing
the
soil texture field test with my fingers or kneading a clay soil, which
is a short step from ceramics or sculpture. Soil has a pleasant smell.
I
like to sit on bare, sun-drenched ground and take in the fragrance of
soil¹ (Jenny 1999). Many farmers and gardeners are enthralled by soil,
not only because it feels good but because it Œbrings us into
relationship with the primal forces of life and death, both physically
and symbolically. We nourish life from a seed, watch it grow, thrive,
spring full of colour and vitality, and then wither and die. This is
the
natural order of things, of all life¹ (Johnson 2003).-
--
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the
merger of state and corporate power." - Benito Mussolini.
billy i like your sayings :).
mr putters thanks so much for the good read--found it
really interesting, also learnt a lot i never knew before :).
cyaaaaaaa, sockiescat:).
> beautiful
> colored eggs and like seeds, grow beauty with love.
>
> Happy Easter!
>
> Donnna
> in WA