Gardening: Mary's Little Eggplant
Friends by Proxy Dirt
In the nursery rhyme of my child hood, Mary had a little lamb. But my new friend and gardening buddy, Mary has a little eggplant. And she is as proud and loving of it as if it were her woolly cuddly lamb.
Mary came to me this spring through a mutual sister gardening pal and
in response to my invitation to have someone or a few someones share my yard for gardening.
As our young publishing company and www.thimbleberrypress.com (and please, become its fan on facebook) has begun to develop, my kid grow up and need more of my time during her teen years, and the demands of this blog increase, my gardening time has diminished. I have sat longing to go outside and get my hands on the dirt...but other duties at the keyboard and steering wheel have called. So I have been thrilled to have Mary come to garden.
Mary is a dear. And a brilliant dear--who is also a medieval scholar. I love to look out my bathroom window and see her folding bike parked beside the sheds and see her loving her plants--herbs, flowers and vegetables into bloom and fruition. I sometimes feel that I am out there with my hands in the dirt instead of hers. We are friends by proxy--proxy dirt.
That Dear Little Eggplant
Mary sent me these eggplant photos two days ago and I was as thrilled as if I were at a birthing! Here in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, through the magic of the internet..and it does seem magic to me still, I can share in the thrill of that first vegelette transforming from bloom to tiny egglette. That is Mary's love and the trans formative amazement of dirt, rain and sun on a tiny seed to nurture it into its fulfillment.

The other day I was watching Frank Capra's 1938 movie version of Kaufman and Hart's smash Broadway hit "You Can't Take It with You".
The movie starred Lionel Barrymore, Spring Byington, James Stewart and Jean Arthur. In one scene, Alice and Jeff are on a date and end up in Central Park discussing life. Jeff allows that banking was not his choice.
My friend Dave has articulated a central issue that I'd not heard described other wise: Food Security. In the Keweenah Penisula, it would take a trucking collapse of only two weeks to starve the population of the entire peninsula, unless there were alternate local food production methods.And in a climate that regularly has winter about 7 months of the year--that is an important issue. How do you make people secure in their food supply? 


