Lettuce from our family garden |
"Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly,
and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully.
Each must do as already determined, without sadness or compulsion,for God loves a cheerful giver"(2 Cor 9:6-7)
Tiny lettuce seeds sprouting in the spring |
a bountiful harvest of lettuce. It is an interesting back story of how we came to have such lush lettuce. Several years ago we began trying to grow lettuce with modest results. Our soil wasn't very good as we had brought some in from our town dump compost. We found the soil quality poor and many diseases present in the soil. We tried to grow many things with fair results. Initially when we planted lettuce it came up but throughout the season it remained tiny, too small to ever harvest. We continued to add bits of left overs from our meals such as bits of extra vegetable stalks, coffee grounds, egg shells to improve the soil and ash from our fire place. Constant little bits were added here and there that the children would bring to the garden each day. The following year we again replanted. This time the lettuce grew a little better. Still nothing remarkable but some lettuce grew. With the warm weather in the summer the lettuce sent up shoots flower and went to seed. Many would advise you pull out your lettuce at this point. This process of sending up shoots and flowering is called: "bolting". Once that happens the leaves become bitter and don't taste good so most gardeners would remove the plants and plant a summer or fall crop of something else. Well the children and I decided to leave the lettuce. It flowered and made seed. As the fall came the seeds seemed to be carried in all directions by the wind. They have a little fuzzy end that seems to act as a sail with a little dark seed attached. The children watched all this beauty taking place with wonder. What would happen to these seeds?
The little seeds in the picture above have now grown |
"This is how it is with the Kingdom of God; it is as if a man were to scatter seed on the land and would sleep and rise night and day and through it all the seed would sprout and grow, he knows not how. Of its own accord the land yields fruit, first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear. And when the grain is ripe, he wields the sickle at once, for the harvest has come." Mark 4: 26-29)
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How to Start a Children's Rosary
Finding Answers to Our Spiritual Questions in the Garden
A Long Winter
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