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Do you do any gardening these days? If so, how does it compare?
Also, if you don’t mind the question, is that land still in your family? Does someone still work it?
Not many years ago, I helped look after an old rancher with dementia. He had lived on the land his whole life and never even travelled far from home. His family was one of my hometown’s original settlers and my school was named after them. But when he passed, there was disagreement and money needs among the next generation. So they had to sell the land. It seems harder to keep land like that in a family these days.
My mother died 13 years ago in June. My brother owns the property where her house sits, and the big red barn. He had to sell the cows and quit being a dairyman before she died. He now sells equipment to “big” farmers. A couple of my sisters live there in the community, on adjoining properties, so it is being watched over. My brother rents the land to others to grow crops. When my dad died, at age 61 (too young…leukemia) my brother was ready to take over the farm. Some relatives asked (in a somewhat provocative way), “Well…I see your brother is inheriting the whole farm. None of you girls are getting any of it?” And we replied, “Yes, and we’re soooo glad he wants it! You’ll notice that none of us (six sisters) married a farmer!”
In that location, it is very difficult to find a cost-effective market for the milk. Our grandparents started a cheese factory about 100 years ago. But, since then, it has gone out of business, and there just isn’t any profit in hauling the milk100 miles (closet creamery) to a market.
BTW: I LOVE to garden. I have a lovely raised bed of tomatoes about to turn red right now, here in the Mojave Desert. We’ll get zucchini, and green peppers, too. Everywhere we’ve lived, I’ve gardened. I call it : FREE FOOD FOR POOR PEOPLE! I definitely inherited her green thumb.
Homemade < Homegrown.
Glad to hear it. I’ve never tried a raised bed, but I love a garden. We grew a variety of vegetables when I was young, but for some strange reason wasps would sting the tomatoes. Maybe they were going after other bugs inside? These days, stink bugs are the greater threat. Anyway, my favorites were okra (fried) and acorn squash (dessert), but we also had greens and radishes.
Today, I’d say nothing beats a kumquat bush. Being able to pluck breakfast off a tree and eat it without cooking or peeling is one of life’s simple pleasures. I’m told chicken eggs can be similar.
I have to use raised beds here in the Mojave Desert because there really isn’t much soil. A few inches down as you dig, you’ll hit a layer called caliche–it’s like cement. So, containers or raised beds are about the only way to have enough dirt to grow anything.
“Texas soup” (hard clay) is a pain as well, but in the piney woods near the Gulf we have some wiggle room.
Just about anything that can handle the heat can grow around Houston if watered — oaks, palm trees, ferns, cacti, succulents, fruit trees, etc. But the soil is much better in coastal Alabama.
I used to pull branches off my grandma’s red hibiscus, stick them in unfertilized soil without watering, and watch them grow. Camellias cover Mobile certain times of year, along with azaleas.
A wonderful account of a life of gardening.
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