Glorious Tulips Last Only a Short Time
Sara's tulips grew extra large and tall this year, largely
due to the tender loving care afforded them by my wife. She has nurtured the
soil in her favorite garden beds for years, using kitchen-scraps compost,
composted horse manure, rich topsoil, and most important of all, Humic Acid and
Iguana Juice, great 100% organic products from Advanced Nutrients.
You can tell the difference, when you look at the same kind
of tulips growing in the gardens of our neighbors. They're much shorter and
their bowls aren't as full and robust as Sara's. I cherish this time of year,
because I am well aware that just like those magnificent pink cherry blossoms a
block away, blooms like tulips only last a relatively short time.
Tulips were prized possessions at one time in Europe. A
single tulip of the right coloring was worth much more than its weight in gold.
A man had to work for months to pay the prices they were asking. Then some
blight or other took hold and tulips fell out of favor. Well, they're still
very much in favor in our homestead.
As the attached photos clearly attest, the glorious tulips
in Sara's garden are extra special this year. I can hardly wait for Spring a
year from now to have them pop out of the soil once more and grace us with
their presence.
Sara helped me construct a box for a new vegetable garden in
a sunnier spot than before, and she planted seeds with the help of the kids. We
have peas, carrots, arugula, leaf lettuce, spinach, and some herbs growing, as
well as some well developed tomato plants which we haven't put outside yet,
since the radio said something about the chance of frost tonight. We hope this
doesn't happen for the sake of our seedlings!
But temperatures are due to rise over the weekend and then
we'll be yearning for the cool days of early Spring! "You don't know what
you've got, 'til it's gone!"
Labels: Advanced Nutrients, bigger flowers, bigger yields, composted manure, Gabriola Garden, growing vegetables, huge tulips, Humic Acid, Iguana Juice
posted by Tim at 11:49 AM | 1 comments