Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
06.25.2009 4:20 pm

Stewardship and edible landscaping

Special to the Post-Dispatch
  • Email this
  • Print this

One thing most religions seem to agree on lately is that we have to do a better job at taking care of our environment.  Whether you believe that God made the Earth or that it evolved through natural processes (or both, or something else), it’s up to us to take care of it and our natural resources.

I love to garden–even when I hate to garden (you gardeners know what I mean). For me, weeding is meditation and therapy, and caring for plants gives me a sense of connection to all life.

Two things I have done this year to make my gardening more environmentally sound is to get a couple rain barrels, so that this week I’m watering my plants using water from last week’s deluge, and to plant more edibles, especially those that come back each year.

This month I have been enjoying eccentric but delicious backyard salads of mint, chives, sorrel, basil, purslane, and daylilies.  (Basil is an annual but grows like crazy.)  Purslane and daylilies are probably growing in your yard right now–yes, they are edible and they have a light, fresh taste (unlike, say, dandelion leaves, which are usually bitter). Make sure you’ve correctly identified any weed before you eat it, of course–the Botanical Gardens can help.

Every bit of food you can grow or forage around your house saves the energy that would’ve been spent trucking foods to the store and your driving to get them; plus it’s fresher, healthier, and cheaper.  In this recession, try doing yourself and the planet a favor and replace those impatiens with some edibles.  And try weeding as a spiritual practice.  Really.

4 comments

Comments are closed.

Lately, weeding is just sweating for me, but pruning tomatoes - now that’s a moment of zen.

I’ve been trying to come up with a worthwhile way to use rain barrels, but my garden is across the yard from any downspouts. I’ve also been wanting to pull the trigger on drip irrigation to cut down on water, but it’s pretty much rained enough until the past week to keep me from needing to water. Try mulching w/ grass clippings - it’s free and cuts down on water loss even more - but it will cut down on your spiritual growth through reading.

— mikew
7:22 am June 26th, 2009

I meant “through weeding” not “reading…”

— mikew
7:44 am June 26th, 2009

Purslane looks like what my wife calls “hog grass”. She said the hogs on the farm just loved it. The only way I can control it in the garden is to mow between the rows when the weeds get too high and let the grass crowd it out before I till again.

— davel
12:22 am June 28th, 2009

Rain barrels are a great way to water (for free) your flowers, herbs, or whatever you want to grow. There are a lot of ways to help the Earth - recycle, solar panels, walking/riding a bike. I wish everyone took the health of our planet as seriously as Kate.

By the way, I find weeding to be relaxing for some reason too, although I never thought I would think that. Maybe it’s because I am grabbing the little suckers and ripping them from the soil…to each his own I guess LOL…

— Tim
3:42 pm June 29th, 2009