Tuesday, September 20, 2011

herbal allies

Calendula blossoms drying. Calendula is one of my favorite herbs for enhancing lymphatic circulation and healing gut inflammation. It also makes a lovely healing oil for topical uses.


We managed to get a few beautiful heirloom tomato volunteers before the stink bugs set in for late summer eating.


We had tons of sweet annie this year, a wonderful smelling, anti-malarial protection plant

My prized passionflower, a transplant from Smile herb shop, brought to me by Holly Torgerson. I have been trying for 3 years to get a passionflower to grow, and this one has rewarded me with many beautiful flowers. The most amazing flower on the planet! Passionflower is one of my favorite herbs for calming an overactive mind and gently lulling one to sleep.
The queenly elecampane, towering above the rest of the garden. Elecampane root is a valuable lung tonic, helping you to expel phlegm and congestion from the lungs.

harvests

My newfound magical herb friend: Nigella, or Black Cumin seed. A beautiful flower and wonderful cure-all from the middle eastern herbal tradition. The seeds are eaten and used for "everything that ails you"


This has been the year of cherry tomatoes! We didn't plant any tomatoes in anticipation of stink bugs. Then we had a thousand volunteer plants that I left in the ground and lo and behold, stink bugs didn't bother them much! That means cherry tomatoes coming out of our ears!
Look at this giant lettuce leaf basil! We've been busy harvesting my 5 types of basil to make enough pesto to last throughout the winter

A red kuri squash flower gets magically turned into a delicious squash
Our first year growing onions from seed, started in february, harvested in september

Friday, July 1, 2011



Now that spring has come and gone, we've been very busy keeping the garden civil. The herbal wheel has been filled in with herbal reseedings from last year, volunteers from compost, and invasions of clover, grass, and thistles. Having a garden in the middle of a wild hay field means constant weeding of prolific wind-blown seedlings. It is very humbling to leave for a week and come back to a garden that is reclaiming itself. Despite lots of sun and little water since spring, most of the beloved herbs I have introduced are thriving.

summer garden 2011

The chestnut trees have been buzzing with bees and musky flower pheremones as the flowers begin their growth into baby chestnuts
The foxglove is quite at home in its little corner it has carved out beside the wormwood

And we've got new arrivals who most likely hitched a ride over here from Carolyn's garden in the compost we spread in the spring: Poppies! Such an amazing plant to watch bloom- each bent over stem waits for its turn to pop into scarlet bloom brilliantly for a day and then fall to pieces of red confetti on the ground
And lamb's wool, that soft furry queen whose purple flowers are loved by bees and pollinators. She's made herself quite happy here.

summer garden 2011

Salvia azurea, or blue sage, coming back from last year

The chamomile (that I never planted) has come back with abundance, and I have been harvesting some for tea


Early in spring I scattered dill seeds everywhere and it made a nice green feathery groundcover

Which in a month has turned into giant yellow firework flowers, swaying in the wind

summer garden 2011

Amazing iris color display in Carolyn's English garden


So excited that the Blue Cohosh I brought back from Ohio is alive and well!

Happy garlic!

happy lettuce
happy kale!

Garden 2011

We had a lovely time watching the emergence of spring, with gorgeous iris, blooming onion, forsythia, and dogwoods


lemon balm awakening from its slumber to conquer the world!


We started in early spring with seedling trays of onions, broccoli, kale, calendula, lettuce, and 10 lbs of garlic in the ground. We had a very wet spring, which was great for the greens. I am always amazed at the power of the moment of transition from the dead, empty appearance of winter to the rapid green growth of spring. Its a season of renewal, hope, and promise. As the strength of the sun returns, and the forsythia and daffodils emerge, I can feel my energy levels and spirits start to rise. This is a time of planning for the long year ahead.