Mother's Day weekend traditionally marks the last frost date here in our high-desert valley at 7,000 feet elevation. Which means it's time for our indoor "farm" of tomato, oriental eggplant, basil and annual flower starts to move to its summer home out in the garden.

First to go out are the tomato plants, because while they're cute when they're seedlings, once they get big, they grow into a jungle that takes over my yoga space. So one nice morning late last week, I moved their flat to the garden door to let them get used to the idea of the wild outdoors.

Tomatoplants

(The post-it labels help me keep straight on which plant is which of the eight varieties of tomatoes I grow: Yellow mini-pear, Chianti rose, Black krim, Costuluto, Persimmon, Pompeii roma, and Super bush, all from Renee's Garden seeds; and Cherokee purple from Botanical Interests.)

Membrane
Richard helped me lay out the red membrane that keeps moisture from evaporating up through the surface of the soil (a nod to our dry climate, where evaporation always trumps rainfall), and also reflects green waves of light back to the plants, encouraging them to grow more and produce more flowers (helpful in our short, high-elevation summers). 

Tomatoplanted

We spaced the plants carefully so they could grow without crowding each other. I cut Xs in the membrane for each plant, popped it quickly out of its pot and into our rich black organic soil, and then before it had time to go into shock at the bright, high-altitude sunlight and searing mountain wind, Richard lowered a tomato tepee (also called a wall-o-water, and red for the same reason as the membrane) over the plant.

Cocooned

We worked together to fill the tubes in the plastic cocoon with water to hold the "tepee" upright and insulate the tender plant from the weather, and pretty soon, there was our tomato farm, all planted.

Teepees

On Mother's Day, we planted the basil and the oriental eggplants, and seeded in the first summer planting of lettuce to replace last fall's salad greens bed, which is almost mature, and will be planted in summer squash next weekend. (We rotate plantings of salad greens around the garden to economize on space and cut down on the chance of developing populations of soil-resident pests.)

Basil

(That's the basil "plantation" in the photo above, behind a garlic plant that I planted last fall. I use garlic as a deer deterrent. It's not working this drought year, when the deer are eating anything green just to keep from starving.)

Daffspeonies

What else is happening in the garden? The peonies are up and budding between the last of the daffodils in the bed just outside the kitchen garden. And our restored native meadow yard is beginning to green up, since we finally had half an inch of moisture in the form of a wet spring snow on May Day. Half an inch may not seem like much, but it increased our annual tally by fifty percent. Did I say it was a drought year here?

Basket

For Mother's Day, my love bought me a wonderfully abundant basket of petunia and verbena to hang from the porch off our living room, where I can admire it from the couch. And our restored bunchgrass meadow yard produced one of its miracles, the first Indian paintbrush flower (Castilleja integra).

Indianpaintbrush

Those neon-vivid scarlet bracts delight me every year with their shameless food-for-sex advertisement, luring hummingbirds to sip the nectar within and thus pollinate the tiny greenish flowers concealed by the bright bracts. Blooming time comes, even in a drought year–that's one of life's miracles.

*****

We're off over the mountains to Denver tomorrow afternoon. We'll help my dad finish setting up his new Macintosh computer and then I'll attend the annual banquet of the Colorado Authors League while Richard rests and stores up energy. (My WILDLIVES CD is a finalist for the CAL award.) Wednesday morning, we'll talk with Richard's oncologist, and if all looks good with the bloodwork from today, he'll spend an hour and a half in the infusion center getting his first dose of Avastin.

May it bring his blooming time and the miracle of recovery…

Last night I went to sleep thinking of yesterday's tragedy in Tucson, and this morning woke with a haiku in my head. As some of you know, I have a daily haiku practice: I post a haiku and photo every morning on Facebook and just the haiku on Twitter (search: susanjtweit).

It's my way of fostering awareness and mindfulness about what's happening in life–in particular, the community of the land–in the virtual world of internet social networking. The brevity of classical haiku–a whole thought contained in 17 syllables–is perfect for Facebook, and for Twitter's 140-character limit. The discipline helps me shape my thoughts and choose my words, and say something I hope is useful in short form.

As I understand it, haiku was originally a sort of epigram introducing a longer poem; it's traditionally a 5/7/5 form, with five syllables in the first line, seven in the second and five in the third, although in English that particular rhythm is a strict rule. Haiku is usually focused on nature and landscape. There's traditionally a reference to the season or the time of year and a word that acts as a hinge between two thoughts, scenes or parts of the poem, and it often incorporates a surprise.

Here's what formed in my head as I thought of yesterday's shooting:

Haiku for Tucson–and the world:

To grow healing:
sprout. reach for the sun. drink rain. root.
grow community.

Cardon

My heart goes out to Representative Giffords and her family, along with the other shooting victims and their families, and the shooter and his family–to the whole community, really.

••••

Today's post was to be just a brief garden report in honor of the persistence of our kitchen garden in this extraordinarly dry and cold winter. We've received less than an inch of moisture here in the valley since last September; our snow shovels sit unused on the back porch. Without the blanket of moisture, nighttime temperatures have already dropped as low as minus twelve, and winter's a long way from being over.

Rowcovers

Yesterday, when I pulled back the row covers on the two beds in the kitchen garden that we keep under wraps over the winter, to check the soil moisture, I was delighted to find not just hardy spinach and winter herbs like parseley and chervil thriving; the baby lettuces were looking great as well. That is an auspicious sign for the occasional winter salad, as well as a impressively good jump-start on greens for spring.

(That's the row covers in the photo above, with a skiff of snow–all we've gotten this winter so far–giving them a bit of white frosting. Below is some of the lettuce. These particular plants are Monet's Garden Mix from Renee's Garden Seeds–aren't they pretty? They're small but thriving despite the sub-zero nights!)

Winterlettuce

••••

One final note: Tomorrow I have the honor of kicking off the blog book tour for a charming and insightful new children's book, Your Fantastic Elastic Brain, by JoAnn Deak, Ph.D. I thought I knew a lot about brains after the past 19 months with Richard's brain cancer and his two brain surgeries, but this book taught me some new aspects of our body's most amazing organ. So swing by tomorrow for a review of Your Fantastic Elastic Brain and a special offer from publisher Little Pickle Press. (Note to FTC: I don't receive any compensation for these reviews–I should be so lucky!)

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