Skip to main content

The Process

Describing my garden as my medium isn’t entirely accurate. My medium is something beyond “the garden.” It’s our land. It is much more than the plants growing here. I want this space to be full of life. There should be flowers, worms, bees, fruits, grasses, trees, spiders, and chickens. There should be harmony. The garden is a macro view; it’s the obvious and visual piece. I want this land to teach me lessons that I can apply to more land in the future. I want my canvas to grow. In my wildest dreams of success it might inspire someone else too, the way that learning about regenerative agriculture has inspired me.

The words “Finding My Medium” were scrawled on the top of a page for the last 4 seasons, and I did nothing with them. They just sat there. Every once in a while I would erase them and write them again. I found myself inspired to expand on the idea sometimes when I was wandering through the botanic gardens admiring a stranger’s use of color, texture, and repetition. I have been too intimidated to start; afraid of feeling uninspired when working with words instead of soil. In my notebook, I wrote “creativity is a process” hoping that reminder would help me to move through my anxiety. Finally, I started, and I never would’ve predicted what got the pencil moving: Chickens.

This March we decided we would get a flock of six hens. Josh and I had said we would get chickens before, and then we didn’t. We’ve changed our mind half a dozen times. Last spring, we decided it just wasn’t worth it. We live in the suburbs. Good quality eggs are becoming very accessible. Animals get expensive fast. By June of last year I had completely changed my mind, again. My garden needs animals living on it’s soil if it was ever going to approach what I had dreamt up.


We got our flock in the first days of April. They spent their first week living in a box in my office where I listened to them happily chirp and scratch through their first days of life while I worked. We shared our exciting news with friends and family, and everyone wanted to know more. I don’t think they realized those inquiries would result in me finally using this URL, and that they would need to read about my garden and lost creativity in order to see updated chicken pictures. And yet, here we are.

I couldn’t start the story in the middle. The chickens wouldn’t be here if not for the garden.


Comments

  1. I love that I you let me be a part of this... and showed my Mom your vision. Guess I will miss this Mothers Day in your Garden. Enjoy your babies. They are adorable!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Best Casino Secret Bonus Codes | CasinoFreak.com
    › casino-secret-bonus-code › casino-secret-bonus-code Jun 7, 2021 — Jun 7, 2021 Discover 188bet the best Casino Secret Bonuses. No Deposit Free Spins · No Deposit Free Spins · No カジノ シークレット Deposit Free Spins · 샌즈카지노 No Deposit Free Spins. Casino secrets. Casino

    ReplyDelete
  3. Top 10 best slots casinos for 2021 - SOL.EU
    Best Slots Casino: febcasino Best Real Money Slots sol.edu.kg Sites 2021 · Red 도레미시디 출장샵 Dog Casino: Best Overall Slots ford escape titanium Casino For USA Players · Ignition Casino: Best Casino casinosites.one For Roulette

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Flock

On April 1st we got the first of our flock. Over the next 10 days we named them all. Josh and I sat down and drafted a long list of women from fantasy and science fiction novels. I’d suggested naming them after herbs like lavender and chamomile, but Josh wasn’t as enthused about that. I love the names we decided on. Malta 1 Week Old Bee 1 Week Old Vin 1 Week Old Denna 1 Week Old Auri 1 Week Old Luna 1 Week Old I spent the weeks before getting our chicks frantically researching. It’s all I would talk about. I spoke to everyone I knew who had raised chickens before. I was scared something bad but preventable might happen. I carefully chose the breeds we would get. Buff Orpingtons are docile and friendly, but very productive layers of light brown eggs. Black Australorps are known for the cold hardiness, calm, and for laying roughly 250 eggs per year. Easter Eggers (Americauna/Aracauna) lay beautiful bluish eggs, are very frie

Planting Season

It’s planting season and I’ve had significantly less time to write.  Two weeks ago it was Mother’s day, and for those of us in Denver that means we can put roots in the ground.  My evenings and weekends have been filled with soil.  There was a lot of work to be done in the garden before I could think about planting.  The first step was to clean out the existing vegetable beds.  One raised bed had been haphazardly planted in mid-March with lettuce, arugula, cabbage, radish, and swiss chard.  Already in that bed were chives, parsnips, strawberries, and at the other end some raspberries as well.  I still haven’t decided what I’ll plant in it for the summer season. The raspberries are a challenging companion for many plants, and are slowly expanding their range in the bed.  The other raised bed hasn’t been touched since last fall, and was filled with dandelions and happy little seedlings from the neighbors Siberian Elm tree*.  This raised bed is one I built in my first spring in this house