Tuesday, August 28, 2012

The Very Busy Spider

We have our very own "Very Busy Spider" in the Heritage CDC Learning Garden!  When I was out in the garden contemplating whether or not to start pulling everything up I found her.  A spider that had spun a web between the butterfly bush and the green pepper plant.  In the middle of the web is a series of ball shaped sacks.  I love spiders.  I love them in books.  I love them in songs.  I love them in the garden.  I admire their work ethic.  I admire their diligence.  Needless to say, I left everything in the garden for one more week...who knows what other spiders might need a place to spin a web?

"The autumn days grow short and cold;
I'ts Christmas time again.
Then snows of winter slowly melt.
The day grows short, And then...
He turns the seasons around,
And so she changes her gown;
Mother Earth and Father Time.
How very special we are
For just a moment to be
Part of life's eternal rhyme."
Charlotte's Web by EB White




Friday, August 10, 2012

It's an Eggplant!

Is it a bird?  Is it a plane?  Is it a boiled egg?  It's an eggplant!  We have white eggplants growing in our garden and we are pretty excited.  About the only thing I know about eggplants is that is best served in lasagne or as a parmigiana and is usually big, oblong and purple.  Our eggplants are small, round and white...basically like an overgrown boiled egg.  Here are a few fun facts about eggplants for your education and entertainment.

  1. Eggplants aren’t REALLY vegetables, they’re berries. Which isn’t that strange, considering other fruits are commonly mistaken for vegetables – like tomatoes.
  2. Eggplants and tomatoes are actually related. They both belong to the nightshade family with the famous literary poison – deadly nightshade. But don’t worry, eggplant isn’t toxic (at least not in normal amounts).
  3. A study published in 1993 in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that eggplant has by far the highest level of nicotine of any vegetable. But it’s such a small amount that there’s really no need for concern. You would have to eat between 20 and 40 pounds of eggplant to consume the amount of nicotine you’d get smoking one cigarette.
  4. But eggplant had a bad rap before it’s comparison with cigarettes. Ancient Persian philosophers ascribed all kinds of ailments to them – from pimples to epilepsy.
  5. People in the U.K. called them aubergines. The word “aubergine” goes all the way back to the ancient Indian language Sanskrit. The eggplant is believed to have originated in India, where it is considered to be the King of Vegetables.
  6. The word “eggplant” that we use in North America comes from British-colonized India, where at the time, a small, white, egg-like variety of the vegetable was all the rage.
  7. In Renaissance Italy, it was called a mala insana or “crazy apple”.
  8. Japan even has a proverb about eggplant:
    “The happiest omen for a New Year is first Mount Fuji, then the falcon, and lastly eggplant.”

Thursday, August 2, 2012

The rain rain rain came down down down

"The rain rain rain came down down down
In rushing, rising riv'lets,
'Til the river crept out of it's bed..."
~Winnie the Pooh

Well, maybe not quite like that but we've had 2 days of rain this week...hallelujah!  Our peppers are multiplying.  Our tomatoes are finally turning red.  Our cucumbers are blooming but we've no produce as of yet.  I'm not ready to throw in the towel on the cucumbers just yet.  Maybe a few more Winnie the Pooh rain showers and we'll have some cucumbers to discover and donate.