Life as a Spectator Sport

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Thursday, February 09, 2006

The flowers that bloom in the spring, tra-la . . .

It's not spring yet, in fact, but the seed catalogs are piling up and I just placed my first order. I plant only open-pollinated varieties and save the seed from them, so I don't order nearly as much seed as I did years ago, when everything had to be purchased new each year. I also trade seed on the Yahoo Seed Traders mailing list and with friends. Even so, it's fun to try varieties I haven't planted before. This year I ordered both the red and the white varieties of currant tomatoes, as a replacement for the F1 hybrid Jelly Bean grape tomatoes I grew last year. I also ordered Schimmeig Striped Hollow tomato seeds, a variety I've never tried before. They look like ripe bell peppers, and should be great for stuffing.

I have seeds from last year's generic yellow squash, Kentucky Wonder pole beans and some variety of peas that I've forgotten the name of but which grew like crazy on the trellis along the back porch. And I found an open-pollinated variety of broccoli called Rosalind, with purple florets. Those will go into the seedling flats as soon as they arrive.

The bees are doing fine, and I ordered a jug of something called bee scent, which you spray on flowering edibles to make them more attractive to bees so they will be completely pollinated. I'll have to really watch the hives this year and put enough supers on to catch the additional honey! I didn't harvest any honey last year, just left the supers on the hives so the bees would have plenty of honey over the winter. This year I intend to get a good batch of both honey and wax for myself.

That's the garden report for now, more later. For the moment, I'm so disgusted with the lies coming out of DC that I can't bring myself to even think about them, much less to write about them. So I'll play in the dirt for a while instead.
posted by Liz @ 6:00 PM     |


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WHY 'LIFE AS A SPECTATOR SPORT'

"If you're lucky not to live in the gutters of a slum, but still can't afford to take vacations in the Alps, you're part of that enormous middle class who lives life through the medium of the television, further separated from "real" life by air conditioner, by automobile, by dishwasher, microwave and ice-in-the-door refrigerator, by automatic washer and dryer, and all the other appliances and conveniences that make it possible for America to live life at second hand. I'm not sure why Americans decided that televised drama was better than the real thing, that cardboard microwave food containers were an adequate substitute for real dishes, and their contents for real food, or that cooking, dishwashing and face-to-face conversation wasn't worth the effort and time it required. Someone fed this nation a plastic crate of out-of-season tomatoes and told us it was life and we took them at their word, and we're so much the poorer for it that it's hard to know where to start to list the shortcomings."


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