Archives: Recently in horticulture
May 26, 2009
Does David Suzuki dig your garden?
The third annual David Suzuki Digs My Garden contest is on full steam ahead this year, with the three winning gardeners featured as bloggers on the brand new DMG website. Each week the bloggers—from Richmond, BC, Edmonton, AB, and Ancanster, ON—post blogs and videos, and help answer questions from the public such as, how do I thwart those pesky digging squirrels? or, how do I get rid of dandelions without chemicals? It's all about being green, too—these gardeners pride themselves on having beautiful foliage without the pesticides.
April 6, 2008
Community solutions for food security and urban health, Part 1
This is first in a series of posts I'll be making over the next couple of weeks about food security and the current food crisis, permaculture, and community spaces. (This post replaces the usual Monday lunch blog as I have a lunchtime meeting tomorrow.)
On a brief walk around the neighbourhood today, I told Paul about my idea for a community garden on a vacant, grassy lot. He urged me to write a post about it, and given that I have a few other related issues to bring up, I decided to split it over a few posts.

Brown at the time of this photo, the grasses are growing greener now that it's spring
September 16, 2006
Tomatoes don't grow on trees
I'm going to be creating another blog as part of my grad project. It will be at http://www.erikarathje.ca/tomatoes/ I think. Don't go there yet because it's the hideous default stylesheet with no content! Anyway, I'm planning on calling it "Tomatoes don't grow on trees", and it will feature articles and my own commentary on my food and nutrition-related experiences.
Basically my grad project topic is exploring the role of industry & politics in determining nutrition & health. Ever wonder why eating a tomato feels like eating a pencil crayon, knowing the pencil crayon would have more flavour?
Speaking of trees and fruits, my 11.5-year-old Macintosh/Spartan apple tree finally bore fruit that I picked and sampled this afternoon. I don't think they were quite ripe, or at least the small one that I happily ate, but it was DELICIOUS, tart but sweet, and crunchy! I've never liked those apples so I'm glad I enjoyed it. I touched and thanked the tree, and graciously said goodbye to its browning, leaning grandeur as it may not survive the winter. My mother gave it a good shook at some point (trying to push it over, I was informed today!), which she says shocked it into bearing fruit. (You can also give a wisteria a death threat that will make it bloom.) It gave 5 or 6 and I ended up with 3 in the end. Mom says that it's a sign it's going to die. :( But, I planted it from seed, and it was a good tree. It gave me its final (parting) gifts. Thank you, old friend.
I don't think I can bear the picture and thought of my dad taking a chainsaw to it and slicing its trunk and limbs. I think that... I should like a piece of it made into something, even if it's just a 1"-thick ring that I can put on the wall or something. I think, though, that that would make me very sad... knowing it was part of a living tree once, MY tree. If we can use its branches and trunk as much as we can and make something from it, grant it some honour, I'll be grateful.
June 27, 2006
it's alive! and well
I figure even if that vine in the living room survives, its green limbs are so sparse it's not worth keeping. I'd move it to the office where it would get more light (I think that's the main problem) if I didn't think it would SHED EVERYWHERE. Sigh.

it's cheering up now

my gerbera in all its glory, last summer
June 27, 2006
photo time!

my apple tree has apples! at last!!! i planted it from seed in the spring of 1995.

my mother's daisies

all by its lonesome, a heron on the beach at Cates Park

i wonder if it knew we were there, looking at it

looking through a gap in the trees for a better view
since we got our red gerbera, we've also bought a dracaena marginata, a pink african violet, a small tropical vine, and this orange gerbera, photographed today in its complimentary blue pot (along with a cutting of our other vine, which is dying).


our dracaena
June 12, 2006
poor plant!
the gerbera needs to be repotted as its roots are poking out the bottom... which was in another pot with no holes so the poor thing was sitting in about a 1/4" of water for god knows how long. it seems to be perking up now, though. i discovered a severed flower bud in the pot though, and i don't know how long it's been there, but *sniff*.
i'm rather attached to it, which people don't understand, but it's my plant and i love it. it has featured in artwork as well. (colour has been altered in the process.)

if this one dies, i'm going to buy another one. i've had it for a year, given to me with meaning. he says it's about what it means, not the plant itself, but i do rather like the plant. it yields gorgeous flowers. for now i can only hope it will survive long enough to repot it soon and then flourish, but i think that's it for flowers this year! maybe i'll buy another one anyway or get some cut flowers.
poor thing.
May 29, 2006
flowers

and the new addition to the family (of plants, that is)

About
I am a communication designer in Vancouver, BC. Most of my writing and community activism are in the interconnected issues of public transit, local eating and food security, politics, health, environment, and sustainability in general. At heart, I'm a geek and a total treehugger. Nature, tea, good food and great company make me happy.
Currently reading:
"Trauma Farm: A Rebel History of Rural Life"
Brian Brett




