Monday, June 28, 2010

It Will Grow On You

It all started innocently enough three decades ago with my friend Jean telling me there was a fantastic nursery that we just had to go to. We wandered what seemed like endless acres of green houses. I was ignorant in every aspect of horticulture, but Jean confidently instructed me about this plant and that shrub, admiring the tender shoots with shining eyes as if they were newborn babies.

She convinced me that I needed to grow something, so with my pauper's resources, I purchased one small potted house plant, based on her  educated recommendation. The cute little green baby asparagus fern eventually grew into a monster, trailing 6' long, with a span of at least 3', rivaling Audrey II in Little Shop of Horrors, whispering 'feed me' every time I passed it.

While the fern was taking over my dining room, Jean showed me how to take an avocado pit, pierce it with toothpicks and half submerge it in a glass of water, to start my very own avocado tree. My children were amazed to watch the seed slowly split, send down a delicate root into the water, followed by a shaft of green stalk sprouting with leaves. It was awesome to watch the process, and we could no longer simply throw avocado pits in the garbage.

It was after Jean hosted a 'plant party' that it became my full fledged addiction. Everyone that she invited had to bring plant cuttings and starts to trade. I left that day with the beginnings of Wandering Jew, Pathos, Purple Velvet, Prayer Plant, and Philodendron.

I potted, nurtured, clipped, propagated and shared the little new lives with any poor victim that would take them. Many met my plant enthusiasm with downcast eyes, politely saying thank you, while whispering polite protests of 'I have a brown thumb and will probably kill it.'

I realized it had become a sickness years later, when I couldn't stand seeing wilting, neglected plants on people's desks at work. 'Let me take that home and get it healthy' I would insist, and my house become a hospital emergency jungle ward for ailing greenery.

The first step was prune the ailing plant patient back severely, getting rid of the diseased and dead foliage. Second, set any viable cuttings in water to propagate. Third, nurture to make everything grow, grow, grow!

I became a plant pusher, a pathos pimp, a propagation purveyor, following steadfastly after Jean's example. I really went over the top when I became so bold as to ask total strangers and receptionists in business offices, if I could have cuttings from their beautiful plants.

I made my husband Jim crazy at least once a year when I repotted everything, giving the plants new soil, and room to grow. It was an all day project with dirt, and discarded trimmings everywhere.

After many moves, and protests from hubby, I finally pared it down to seven indoor plants, but when we moved into our new home 5 years ago to a bare dirt yard, it was like giving an artist a fresh palette and saying 'paint'. I was overwhelmed with the desire to plant, propagate, and create yard work for Jim and myself.

I filled our little parcel with dwarf fruit trees, cherry, pear, apple and plum. Blueberry bushes line the back, raspberries and strawberries the sides, and a few rhubarb plants for good measure. I put in a mix of deciduous and evergreen trees for shade and privacy year round. Roses line the front yard, along with a lilac, rhododendron, azaleas, gladiolas, hydrangeas, hens and chicks, and other things that I can't remember the names of.

Our friend Ron whacked a good size branch off his neighbors curly willow tree four years ago, and told us to stick it in the ground. To our amazement it grew into a beautiful tree. Every time a branch grows into the path to Jim's hobby shed, I prune it off and stick it into the ground, resulting in the beginnings of a curly willow forest, with nine curly willow trees lining our small yard, and many more given away to friends, neighbors and any stranger who dares compliment them.

Of course I use the word 'I' liberally when referring to all this gardening, since my poor husband is drafted into every project I create. He patiently fertilizes, mows, chops, weeds, and hauls the results of my vegetative visions, even though he proclaimed during our wedding vows that he does not garden. He appears resigned to my newest dream project of raised beds for the strawberries, since our marital arthritis is making it painful to bend or stoop to weed and pick for very long.

I was not surprised to learn later that Jean Godfrey, who is to blame for this fine and pleasant misery I enjoy, had become the Executive Director of the Columbia Gorge Fruit Growers Association. It is the perfect job for a Propagation Purveyor. For those of us who don't make plants a career, it is certainly a hobby that will grow on you.

In Orting, the best place to get your garden growing is Orting Floral and Green House. Kari and Mike Otis are friends to everyone that walks into the door of their business at 117 Eldredge Avenue Northwest. Everything is locally grown and you'll get good old fashioned service here. You can give them a ring and place orders at (360) 893-2924. 

Genesis 11: 27-31 So God created man in his own image,in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. God blessed them and said to them, "Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves on the ground." Then God said, "I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food. And to all the beasts of the earth and all the birds of the air and all the creatures that move on the ground—everything that has the breath of life in it—I give every green plant for food." And it was so. God saw all that he had made, and it was very good...

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

My Clay Jar Full Of Treasures

 It looks like a simple little clay jar, but this pot holds a treasure trove of special hidden memories for me.

My dear friend Jean  gave it to me as a gift, 31 years ago in 1979. Little did either of us know how vastly our lives would change over the next three decades. As she and her family moved away to California, and I took my three children back to Idaho when my marriage ended, I gave up all hope of ever seeing her again.

We lost touch over the years, but I had my jar that was full of reminders of our special times together. Originally I filled it with sugar, but at one point the lid was broken and after gluing it back together, I turned the damaged part to the back so no one else would see it, and retired it from normal kitchen service.

It held a special place of honor on the shelf, quietly reminding me of her unconditional love, care, and  vast kindness she had shown me during very difficult years. And the broken part was like me, a broken life, glued back together, never quite the same, but still full of unseen treasures, hidden from most, but those who stop to really look and learn have the opportunity to discover them.

I had tried to find her many times over the years, but discovered no clue as to her whereabouts through my searches online. Every time I passed the treasure jar, I thought of her and wondered about her well being, sometimes saying a little prayer for her.

Then a week ago I got a message on my face book page from a Jean Godfrey (formerly Helseth), asking if I was her old friend. How joyful it has been to reconnect online. I cried, she cried, we're trying to catch up, but it is going to take some time together in person, which is totally possible, because as it turns out, she now lives only a few hours away. She had been looking for me also, but my name was Rhonda Ellson back then and she was having the same problem I did in my searches.

Yes, there have been many changes over the years. Both her boys are married, have served in the Air Force and Army, and she is a grandma 4 times over.

She posted this photo of me with baby John back in 1979. She and I both  had thick manes of long dark hair back then, and now it is much paler with the platinum earned with age, sometimes camouflaged with color, but certainly earned. The bodies have changed, and the strength has waned a bit, but the sifting of time and trials has brought wisdom and left us with treasures that many  may not be able to see, but are the jewels that cannot be stolen

With great anticipation I am looking forward to new memories to store in my little jar as we set aside a little time together. As Jean so aptly put it in her email to me, "This is like opening up a really good book and you can't wait to get to the next page."

 I can't wait!





2 Corinthians 4:7  But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us.