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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today we went out for Small Business Saturday. I noticed that a downtown pocket park, which has been slowly developing for some years, had a small light display. (The town's main light display is in a much bigger park but wasn't turned on yet when we went past.) So I stopped to take some pictures.

Walk with me ... )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This is the free poem for the November 2024 [community profile] crowdfunding Creative Jam. It was inspired by a prompt from [personal profile] fuzzyred. It also fills the "green / yellow" square in my 11-1-24 card for the Sleepytime Bear Bingo fest. This poem is about autumn and gardening.

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ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Almost everything in the Charleston Food Forest is something I'm growing, would like to grow, or at least recognize from edible plant studies. So I thought it would be fun to break that down, listed in approximate spatial order moving through the lists of pictures ...

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ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
My partner Doug spotted this place recently, and today we explored the Charleston Food Forest and its plants. (See Part 2 Right Back, Part 3: Left BackPart 4 Left Front, and What I'm Growing.) It's a skinny rectangle, and not all that big. If you cut it in half and lined the halves up as a square, then it would fit in a typical town yard around here. It has a LOT of plants in it, thoughtfully chosen and arranged. I wouldn't call it a food forest myself, because while it has multiple layers, it is really short. I doubt anything is more than about 10-12 feet tall. That's sensible in a garden this small. But when I think of a forest, I'm thinking one that at least has a canopy layer. Mine has emergents, the main canopy, the subcanopy, and then all the shorter stuff as shown here (understory trees, shrubs, herbs, groundcovers, roots, fungi, vines, etc.). So I'd probably call this one a permaculture garden. (See the layers of a food forest and permaculture design principles.) I didn't spot actual guilds, but everything is arranged in logical order. Someone has done an amazing job setting this up in the space available.

The really subversive thing: it's not a garden to be looked at, it's a garden to be used, for free, by everyone. A little slice of Terramagne, or Turtle-Island-That-Was, especially since it's located right next to a government building with several human service offices. So I helped myself to some seeds. Sure, I might come back later for things to eat. But what I am really interested in is gathering things from here that I can grow at home.

I could only think of two things I'd really add to make this even better:

1) A Little Free Seed / Plant Library so folks could swap things.

2) A community bulletin board, chiefly for people to post their Have / Want lists for trading, but could also be used to announce things like plant swaps or sales, garden open houses, etc. There is an Events section on the back side of the welcome sign, but it's under glass.

Walk with me ... )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today I took some pictures around the yard. These are images from the house yard.

Walk with me ... )
spiralicious: Cereal Killer Mask (Default)
[personal profile] spiralicious
It's a bit dated now, but I still wanted to share. This fall I had some exciting plant news.

1) The biggest being that I have had an unknown plant for 27 years and we were finally able to identify it. I bought it when I was 11 at a street fair and it became quickly apparent everything I had been told about it was a lie, but for lack of better information, we've always referred to it as "the palm tree" knowing it wasn't one, but it looked like one.

No one else ever seemed to know what it was. I tried looking it up online after it became an option, a few times, but nothing ever looked quite the same and there were too many possible options it could have been, so I gave up.

This year though, we had a weird stretch of weather in early October, where it had been super wet and then was extremely warm, for our area, and it suddenly flowered for the first time ever.

The flowers were very easy to identify. I've had a Yucca plant this whole time. It seems obvious now and I feel incredibly silly for not figuring it out sooner, but the mystery has been solved.

2) Last year, I got really sad about missing out on a wavy fern plant. This October, I was able to get one and it's living happily by my front porch.

3) My mums came back a 3rd year in a row. It just always amazes and delights me every year they come back.
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
My Breck's order arrived.  :D 3q3q3q!!!!  So now I have lots of things to plant.

Is anyone else planting fall bulbs for spring flowers?

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