Green Growing Things
May. 20th, 2007 08:09 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
One of the biggest frustrations of house-hunting, at this point, is the problem of gardening. I didn't get to have a garden last year, since I was recovering from knee surgery at what would have been peak digging-and-planting season, and I was truly looking forward to some serious playing in the dirt this year. Unfortunately, since we're really hoping to move before the end of the summer, I don't want to start digging up the yard and fertilizing and planting seeds just so that we can leave before things are ready to harvest. On the other hand, given that we have yet to find a house that even remotely resembles somewhere we want to live, odds are that by the time we move into a new place it'll be far too late to start planting.
The practical answer to this, of course, is container gardening. It's better than nothing, I guess. We can grow herbs, if nothing else, and today at Plimoth Plantation I picked up a couple of heirloom tomatoes and an Italian eggplant to try in bigger pots. But it's nowhere near as rewarding as spending a day getting sweaty and dirty digging up the beds, and I'll desperately miss having fresh zucchini and cucumbers and enough tomatoes to supply the neighborhood.
Please, won't someone put a nice, affordable house with a big kitchen and a nonzero yard on the market in our neighborhood? I'll even promise the seller a share of the tomatoes if they agree to close before it's too late to plant. Or, barring that, does anyone mind if I come and garden in their yard for a while?
The practical answer to this, of course, is container gardening. It's better than nothing, I guess. We can grow herbs, if nothing else, and today at Plimoth Plantation I picked up a couple of heirloom tomatoes and an Italian eggplant to try in bigger pots. But it's nowhere near as rewarding as spending a day getting sweaty and dirty digging up the beds, and I'll desperately miss having fresh zucchini and cucumbers and enough tomatoes to supply the neighborhood.
Please, won't someone put a nice, affordable house with a big kitchen and a nonzero yard on the market in our neighborhood? I'll even promise the seller a share of the tomatoes if they agree to close before it's too late to plant. Or, barring that, does anyone mind if I come and garden in their yard for a while?
no subject
Date: 2007-05-21 05:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-21 05:19 am (UTC)