Sunday, November 25, 2012

Comfort, Pleasures, and Gemütlichkeit

This is what I am going to focus on.  These things will drive my life.  I will try to maintain these things in all I do as much as I can.  In it, though, will be attention to aesthetics as they are in my head.  I don't want to explain what this means.  I know what I mean.  I will do this.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Irene

Here are some shots from my window post Irene.

Leaves remaining flipped over.


 People venturing out.  This lady was taking pictures of the tree that was blown down.


It's hard to see but this is the tree that snapped in two from the wind.


Also hard to see but the plots with the tall sunflowers and tomato plants were all blown down.  I really need to get a zoom lens.

Here are some pre-Irene pics.

Nasty squirrel.


Gorgeous basil.


 Cinnamon basil flowering.


It's hard to see where my neighbor's plot ends and mine begins.  I don't know what he/she is growing but it's intruding into my cukes and perilla.


More healthy basil.


Baby cukes growing.


Purple basil turning green.


Perilla getting taller.


Sunday evening after Irene's worst has passed.


Lights on.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

I'm not the only one.

So a friend of mine (hi Tim!) alerted me to the following New York Times article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/07/nyregion/community-gardens-find-theft-is-a-fact-of-life.html?_r=1&hp&pagewanted=all

It is definitely frustrating having your hard-earned vegetables snipped away by thieves (dismissive neighbor, you are wrong!).  I too have considered putting up a sign but as our garden is small and relatively new (2nd year) I don't want to take the aggressive route just yet.

A wrist brace due to a spot of carpel tunnel coming on is keeping me away from doing much weeding so it's still my mother dutifully watering the not-so-little ones on a daily basis.

Check out the bounty of perilla the tiny plot continues to yield:
We counted 160!  At least the perilla are left alone.  But that's because no one around here knows what they are or how to cook them.  That's just fine by me.  

Saturday, July 16, 2011

School Pictures

I have this weird phobia about getting my picture taken.  I'm not going to get into it too much because it's difficult to explain and I'm tired.  Let's just say I don't like being in pictures.  I hate posing for them, I hate seeing myself in them.  All the time.  Even my own mother and close friends have admitted I am not photogenic.  "Um, yeah... you look better than this in real life..." they mutter.  I don't know what it is about me, every physical flaw (and there are a lot) seem to be magnified a hundred fold in pictures.  Or maybe I really do look like that.  But anyway.

I'm not sure when I started developing this phobia but I do recall when I was 10 or 11 I told my mother I didn't see the point to having these awful school portraits taken of me year after year.  I told her she could save money by not ordering them, and I wouldn't have to sit and pose for them.  I could just tell the photographer when he waved to me standing on line that it was my turn, "No thanks.  My parents aren't going to buy your pictures so I'm just going to go stand over there."  My mother's response was, "I need them to give the police if you get kidnapped."

After that, until I got to high school, year after year I dutifully sat on the stool and smiled a feeble smile, picturing the picture that was being taken at that moment in newspapers and fliers stuck to lamp posts.  "Have you seen this girl?" it would say.  I pictured the interior of the van that would whisk me away to some horrible dank location.  I imagined it rusty and cold and unlined.  I wondered what it felt like to be trapped inside the trunk of a car.  I once saw on an episode of Charlie's Angels where a clever woman was able to push through to the back seat after being thrown into a trunk.  I wondered if I could do that.  I wondered if they would duct tape my mouth, or if they would use a strip of cloth.  Would I be able to find a way to cut through the rope while the baddies were eating dinner?  All these scenarios of what I knew kidnapping to be from watching tv ran through my head as the photographer peered through his camera and told me to smile.

It is with this in mind that I snapped these photos of my baby cucumbers this morning.  We noticed that now the culprit is stealing them younger and younger, catching on to the fact that my mother is snipping them before they get a chance to fully mature and, of course, be stolen.  (This is another reason I don't buy my neighbor's "critter" explanation - btw the cukes in the next plot are doing just fine so don't give me that.)  "Have you seen these cucumbers?" is not something I can ask after the asshole steals them.  It really, really sucks that we have such lovely promising things in my tiny plot and after all that hard work we (my mother) put into it, some fucking asshole has to take them.




Thievery

Every time there is a promising cucumber that will be perfect for the picking in another day, it's gone before it has a chance.  This was the case last year with my eggplants.

There's a plot next to mine that's also growing cukes but don't have theirs climbing sticks - theirs are just on the ground, growing in weird shapes.  They seem to be left alone.  All of mine that are the best and visible get snipped away.  Frustrated, I wrote a post on my gardening club's message board asking if anyone else experienced vegetable theft.  I said I hate to think it but it's either that or those squirrels are damn good with scissors.

The one reply I got was short and dismissive.  The writer said I'd be surprised how razor sharp claws are and how critters dug up someone else's bulbs so cleanly that it looked like a human did it with a trowel.  Oh really?  I didn't know critters could weed too.  Let me explain.

The weed situation is out of control in my corner of the garden.  We weeded diligently in the beginning but my mother realized she should leave it alone because the tall weeds on the side of the cucumbers worked as camouflage and hid the good cucumbers growing.  For a while it was working, until one day she noticed someone had cleared all the weeds on that side of the garden and also helped themselves to the best of my cucumbers.  The dismissive lady's suggestion: "I don't know what to tell you except look into wire netting?"  Yeah right.

In other news, I'm wondering if I should move this blog to Posterous.  It seems easier to maintain and I hate the fact that I am no longer able to post photos easily as I once had through flickr.  Now if I want to post a photo I have to use Picasa and it sucks.  Why did flickr get rid of its jpg link?  I don't know what the technical term for it is but it no longer lets me post photos here directly from it.  Since I'm on a different computer and don't have the photos on my hard drive, I have to download it from flickr then upload to Picasa then download it here.  Ugh.  It's so inconvenient.  Posterous, here I come.  Maybe.  I have to look into it more.



Monday, July 4, 2011

Tiny Plot's Bounty in Action

What's the fun in gardening if I can't enjoy the fruits of my labor?  Flowers are pretty to look at but I'm more interested in eating the effort.  Since I don't have a balcony or a back yard in which I can grill delicious beef ribs, I broiled some of my mother's excellent galbi and used the perilla, mint, and lettuce from the tiny plot to eat ssam.  That's ssam as in farm, not ssam as in ham.

Ironic then, that today came about trying to be free from these people:




Meat still sizzling:




















Mint just picked, piled high above baby lettuce:















Basil bounty, washed and just before being turned into pesto:















Excess mint means Moroccan mint tea.  Refreshing.
























Sunday, June 26, 2011

New Plot, New Plantings

This post is long overdue.  But before I go on about all the lovely things growing in my tiny plot, I just want to give a bit what-up to Jeff.  He really helped me out tons earlier this year by weeding my new plot and getting rid of all the broken glass, brick pieces, and rocks.  He grabbed a hoe (not that kind) from the communal gardening tools area and really got to work turning the soil over and mixing in the organic fertilizer and rich gardening soil.  The way he approached this task, with so much focus and determination, actually scared me a little.  Thank you Jeff.  I hope you'll let me make you a salad one day.

Remember when it looked like this?















It's not like I only just started planting.  Actually, the plot is flourishing quite nicely right now.  I kick myself for not having snapped pictures after planting the seedlings.  Since planting, today was actually the first time I stepped foot in the garden!  Why?  Because I started a new job in April and it's been taking up all my time.  Yes, I'd like to be a well-rounded person.  Yes, I'd like to use my time more efficiently so I can pursue personal passions.  Yes, I'd like to find ways to relax other than eating a big bowl of carbs while watching You Tube then falling asleep.

So I have to do another shout-out (is that what the kids are still saying these days?) to my mom who's been completely devoted to my tiny plot.  She's the one who scoured the neighborhood for discarded sticks so the cucumbers have something to climb.  She's been religiously watering the little ones, pruning, weeding.  Today she asked me for an unused makeup brush so she can help the bees and other insects along by pollinating Gregor Mendel-style.  My mother takes great pleasure in our co-op garden, but she especially loves the satisfaction of eating her hard work.

Case in point:












This was an improvised gimbap made with perilla and cinnamon basil (RIP cinnamon basil - more on that later) she used after we had ingredients left over from making Jade some vegan gimbap for her restaurant.  This has pickled daikon, sauteed carrots, egg, and perilla.  Delicious.

The new plot gets about 40% more sun than the last one.  That combined with the hard work Jeff and I put in turning the soil and adding good fertilizer really makes a difference.  See it now:













On the other side of the fence is the composting area.  I helped out making some of the bins last year, before the hand surgery.  I used a bit of the compost when my mother and I planted the seedlings.

The seedlings.  That brings me to the darker side of this gardening club.  Another reason I kick myself for not having taking pictures is that there's been some theft.  Had there been thievery in other plots I'd venture to guess there's be quite a bit of email uproar.  But I haven't seen any.  How do I know it's human and not critter?  The neatness in which my lettuce were so delicately plucked from the earth.  But no matter.  I'm just glad no one stole the first cuke of the season, like the way my baby eggplants would constantly disappear last year.  Here it is:













I was so delighted!  I snipped it off and took it home, washed it, and ate it.  Not bitter at all and the skin was tender enough that I didn't have to peel it.













Here's some gorgeous purple basil I picked up at the Union Square farmers' market:













I'd like them to be doing as well as the Italian variety:













They are so tall and bountiful!  I see a lot of pesto in my future.  A word about my poor cinnamon basil.  I got them along with the other varieties of basil from the farmers' market.  I've never seen or tasted cinnamon basil before but they really do have the distinct fragrance of cinnamon.  Unfortunately, they look a lot like the weeds propagating in abundance along the edges of the plots.  Along came my overzealous mother out to destroy the weeds and, well, you get the idea.  No matter, I'll get more another time.

To make up for the lack of posts documenting my little ones' growth, here are a lot of pics I took this morning.

Jennie's mint.  They survived the bad location, the uprooting, and the winter.  These guys are tough.














Potato leaves.  When my mother and I started planting the seedlings, we found a small potato.  We decided to plant it to see what happens.  This is what happened.



The cucumbers doing very well.  My mother scoured the neighborhood for discarded by sturdy rods to give something for them to climb.



















Tall basil and tall perilla.













Perilla in the sun.













Basil, perilla, lettuce.













Future pickles.