photo-synthesis

…a photographer tries to garden
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Labor Day, Abraham Lincoln, and Genesis

resting my hoe

resting my hoe

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As I take the day off from both my hoe and my camera, I’ve come across a wonderful Labor Day thought. This comes from my wife’s cousin, Trina Zelle – a Presbyterian minister in Arizona. -Bill

Not only was our 16th president adept at citing scripture to underscore his points, it could be argued that Abraham Lincoln read scripture through the lens of his own experience as a worker. In light of his unsurpassed eloquence, we sometimes forget that, early on in his career, he was known as “the rail-splitter.” It is perhaps because of this acquaintance with physical labor that Lincoln’s take on Genesis 3:19 is so strikingly different from conventional and even scholarly interpretations.

God speaks in Genesis 3:19, telling Adam and Eve what awaits them beyond the gates of the garden:

By the sweat of your brow

you will eat your food

until you return to the ground,

since from it you were taken;

for dust you are

and to dust you will return.

The traditional view of this passage is one of work as punishment for the sin of disobedience: “by the sweat of your brow/you will eat your food.” Lincoln, however, did not view it as the description of a punishment but rather as a moral imperative: the food you eat is to be the result of your own work, not someone else’s.

His interpretation of this passage was not an incidental observation made in passing, but can be found in many of his speeches, letters, and reported conversations. Time after time, Lincoln stands with workers against those who would benefit from their labor without just compensation. It is this core belief that serves to undergird his opposition to slavery: you shall not live by the sweat of others.

Lincoln’s life experience of hardship led him to read scripture from the perspective of a worker, and it transformed our nation. His opposition to slavery was a logical extension of his commitment to worker rights.

Now imagine someone else reading scripture. Not a person who has risen to Lincoln’s stature, but an immigrant, waiting this very evening in Altar, Mexico, to begin the dangerous desert crossing to what she hopes will be work, just wages, and a new and better life. Imagine reading these selections from Deuteronomy 26 through the eyes and from the experience of such a person:

My father was a wandering Aramaean and he went down into Egypt with a few people…and became a great nation.…but the Egyptians mistreated us and made us suffer, putting us to hard labor. Then we cried out to the Lord…so the Lord brought us out of Egypt…and brought us to this place and gave us this land, a land flowing with milk and honey.

Not everyone has the poverty-stricken background of an Abraham Lincoln or the unknown woman crossing the desert. But we all have the capacity to imagine, to put ourselves in someone else’s place. Such identification is part of what makes us human. And so I invite you to pick up the texts sacred to your faith. You don’t have to pick out an obvious passage that deals directly with economic justice or worker rights. Read any passage, but do so through the lens of a disenfranchised person – an immigrant; a person who has just lost their job and perhaps their house. See what they see. Feel what they feel. That is the beginning of the kind of solidarity that can transform the world.

Rev. Trina Zelle, ordained by the Presbyterian Church (USA), is Lead Organizer for Interfaith Worker Justice of Arizona.



Decay… Again

broccoli leaf

broccoli leaf

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Once again I am struck by the aesthetic side of decomposition. This time I took the broccoli leaf into the studio to photograph it. It was a little late in the evening and pretty dark for photography outside.

This is the same type of leaf that in June I was so taken by its waterproof quality. It now looks very different. No longer waterproof, it has taken a distinctly autumn-ish color. It looks worn and ragged.

As my garden ages it changes in so many ways. Leaves like this broccoli leaf become battle scarred. Tomato plants wither from the inside as they seem to yield their energy to the fruits as they ripen. The same fate falls to Noah’s pumpkin plants. They look horrible – just dying – again, in sacrifice to the beautiful pumpkins they produce.

Only the pepper plants continue to look as virile as their fruits.

This is the period of the greatest harvest. It comes at a price the plant itself pays. We enjoy the harvest but I also watch as the plants begin to succumb to their efforts.

Pumpkins, Carrots, Turnips & Bison

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Today I spent a lot of time in the garden. I tore out an area next to the pumpkins that had a couple of sickly zucchini plants and weeds. After cleaning it out I planted carrots. In a similar fit of activity I pulled out the remaining turnips – maybe 20 or so – and planted a fall crop of turnips.

Animals have chewed my pumpkins.

Animals have chewed my pumpkins.

They've even chewed my funny-looking one.

They've even chewed my funny-looking one.

The pumpkins continue to grow but word is getting around the animal world that pumpkin is pretty tasty. Does anyone have any idea how to protect pumpkins from the squirrels/rabbits/raccoons/birds that are sampling them? Do I use chicken wire?

I’d love to hear some ideas.

Katie asked if we could take a trip to Fermi Lab in Batavia where there is a great hike through a large meadow of grasses and wildflowers and woods. What she really wanted to see was the Bison herd.

It was a great way to wrap up the day.

Katie with wildflowers in the woods at Fermi Labs.

Katie with wildflowers in the woods at Fermi Labs.

Katie photographing bison.

Katie photographing bison.

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Big Plants… and REALLY Big Plants

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Noah with his pumpkin

Noah with his pumpkin

The largest plant I have in my garden is a couple of pumpkin plants. They long ago

“crawled” over the fence and seem to wander at will in my yard. That’s OK with me. It’s less grass to mow.

For all its size there are only 5 pumpkins growing. They are large pumpkins and Noah seems to enjoy them. They grew with amazing speed – much like Noah.

This past June I photographed a wedding in California. Since it was a late afternoon wedding my friend Jim and I spent a couple of hours the morning of the wedding at the Big Trees State Park.

The Park is home to some of the largest trees in the world. Some of them were large trees when Christ was born.

Jim looking at fallen tree at Big Trees State Park

Jim looking at fallen tree at Big Trees State Park

Their pace of growth is very different than Noah’s pumpkins, however. While the pumpkins have a few scars from birds pecking and squirrels scratching them, some of the sequoias and redwoods have holes from Pileated woodpeckers and black marks from lightning strikes from hundreds of years ago.

I find the different cycles of plant growth very interesting but I’m glad Noah doesn’t have to wait a couple of thousand years for his pumpkins.

A Kitten Grows in Brooklyn

From Jesse comes a little gardening story…

Little "Habañero"

Little "Tabasco"

this is what i found sprouting in my habañero plants when i went to check them in my window cage this morning. only food related because of the peppers…. i don’t eat kitten often.          -jesse

No Progress on the Greenhouse

Clematis on greenhouse

Clematis on greenhouse

So far our plans to turn the greenhouse into something other than an overgrown home for wild animals and rusty tools have been put on hold.

Instead, I have taken the easy way out and continue to do with it what I can. I photograph it.

I enjoy photographing the building season to season and year after year. Because we have lived with it for so long there is a Dorian Gray-quality to the experience. (Of course it is the greenhouse that ages and not us.)

As its architectural elements continue to fade away, the focal point each summer has become the clematis we planted against the south side when we moved here. A climbing rose planted years ago also helps to soften the deterioration.

If the flowers give the greenhouse meaning that may be enough for me to keep it the way it is for another year.

My Nerdish Side Comes Out

Dragonfly

Dragonfly

It occurs to me that an awful lot of what happens in a garden involves insects and spiders.  Because of that I have spent an unusual amount of time watching and photographing them this month.

If you’d like to see a gallery of the results of this please take a look at Insect Portraits.

I find that observing behavior is as fascinating whether it’s children playing in a park or dueling insects on my broccoli plants. Creating environmental portraits in both situations is a challenge I’ve always been prepared to take on. Both require some patience, a little knowledge and good light – just like gardening.

Mid-Season Evaluation

unripe tomatoes

unripe tomatoes

The All Star Game this week has put me in a mood to evaluate how things are going in the garden. Like the Cubs, there are both good and bad things to report.

The photos below tell mostly of the good things going on. The first peppers, both bell and jalapeño, emerged from their flowers today. Zucchini and broccoli are producing well. Noah is seeing the beginnings of what are supposed to become 25-pound pumpkins. Turnips continue to be available to pull as needed. Tomatoes are green, growing and prolific.

broccoli

broccoli

black raspberries

black raspberries

Actually there are very few problems to report. A couple of my zucchini plants are wilting. I suspect either the Squash bug or the Squash vine borer is the culprit. I’ve seen both in the garden. Although there are Japanese beetles in massive numbers, they are not as fond of my garden without green beans this year. They are preferring the grape plants.

wilted zucchini plant

wilted zucchini plant

very small pumpkin

very small pumpkin

zucchini

zucchini

first jalapeño pepper

first jalapeño pepper

small bell pepper

small bell pepper

In evaluating this blog itself, it seems that a more regular posting would be good. This week I got rather involved with photographing insects and neglected my posts. (Well, I also had some work to do.) I will have some things to say – and show – concerning creepy crawlies in a future post.

turnip

turnip

very small pear on a nearly-dead pear tree

very small pear on a nearly-dead pear tree

And finally, inspired by Jesse’s “bug’s eye view” of his pumpkin plant, I’ve included below a similar view of Noah’s pumpkin plant that long ago escaped it’s boundaries. The photo shows the point of escape.

bug's-eye view of Noah's pumpkin plants

bug's-eye view of Noah's pumpkin plants

Pumpkin Flower Feast!

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My children love to cook. They don’t always cook very normal stuff so when Jesse told me that he cooked something from his Brooklyn garden I was curious. Below are the results.

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while i could have climbed out my back window and walked fifty feet to taco santana for one of their delicious pumpkin flower quesadillas, i decided i’d just reach out the window and grab a few. unfortunately there were just a few, but i made do. i found out which are males and which are females; i think all mine so far are males. i picked them and got poked a bit. seems some of the ‘hairs’ on the plant are like very fine cactus needles.

i tossed them in a pan with a bit of garlic and cooked them until they wilted a bit and browned. while they don’t have a very strong taste, they are very earthy and squashlike.

today i threw a few more on top of a black-bean burger with gorgonzola and homemade ketchup!

-jesse

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Winged Monkeys

ladybug beetle

ladybird beetle


There is a war going on in your garden. You may not see or hear it, but be assured – it is as raw and bloody as any war.

It’s not a secret that an army of insects finds your garden as delicious as you do. Their numbers are astounding and their appetite is voracious. I did not attempt to grow string beans this year because of the time I spent last year trying to deal with the Japanese beetles that stripped the plants of their leaves. Despite my best efforts at hand removing them, the beetles won the battle.

But the larger war is not between man and bugs. It is among the bugs themselves. Ladybird beetles eat a small army of aphids that otherwise would suck your tomato plants dry. The ladybug’s cute appearance gives no hint of the coolness of their assassin-like behavior.  The dragonfly’s name let’s you know that it is not a passive-aggressive creature.

Today, however, I saw a most startling thing. I’ve seen it before – but only today was I able to photograph it. Two wasps attacked and consumed a green worm on one of my broccoli plants. It happened very quickly and, to my surprise, was repeated again and again. The wasps flew like winged monkeys from plant to plant finding – and eating – more green worms.

Am I the only one seeing these things? I’ll bet not. I’d love to hear your examples of the benefits of a variety of insects in the garden.

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wasps gang up on worm

wasps gang up on worm

green worm on broccoli

green worm on broccoli

wasp finishes a meal

wasp finishes a meal

Not Pets… Not Pests

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rabbit pal

rabbit pal

They’ve hung around since early spring and we’ve become quite “familiar”. I walk past them several times a day – often coming within a foot or two of them – and always greet them with a quiet “Hello, Rabbits.”

Cindy and I have resisted giving them names. They aren’t pets. But they have the relaxed attitude of a pair of old hounds.  They yawn, stretch and scratch. On one very hot afternoon one of them was under the maple tree beside our studio lying flat on his back chewing a large leaf. As I walked to the garden he looked back at me as if he was disappointed that I didn’t offer him a glass of lemonade.

I think we understand each other pretty well. The rabbit couple has its agenda and we have ours. The fact is, we both need to eat.

I can thank the rainy weather that I’ve been complaining about in previous posts for the congeniality of the rabbits. The rain has allowed an abundance of grass (and weeds) to feed them. It may not be worth their effort to scale even our modest fence if to a rabbit dandelions are as tasty as broccoli.

The same rain that fed the rabbits made our garden grow in abundance. The truth is I wouldn’t deny rabbits a few zuccini or lettuce plants. There’s no need to go all Elmer Fudd on them. I’ve never been concerned about a few animals or even insects getting their due portion of my garden.

But…I did see a pair of young raccoons a few evenings ago eyeing my tomato plants…

rabbit

rabbit

More on Forage Oakland

The New York Times has a very good article about Forage Oakland, the fruit exchange in Oakland, California founded by Sarah’s friend, Asi.

Take a look at Neighbor, Can You Spare a Plum? here.

There are some fine photos of Asi there too!

Longest Day for Photo-Synthesis

On Saturday I am shooting a friend’s wedding in a California vineyard. Since it is an early evening wedding and outside I will need as much daylight as I can get in order to create nice photos.

As it turns out, I am in luck. Since this is one day away from the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere, I will be getting maximum daylight for photography.

Happily, my garden plants will benefit from this same abundance of light.

This is a very good day for a photographer-gardener!

old lilac bush bathed in light

our old lilac bush bathed in light

Faux Mercury

broccoli

broccoli

water beads on broccoli

water beads on broccoli


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I’ve mentioned before that rain causes some visual transformations in the garden. This has caused me to discover an amazing fact about the broccoli plant. It is completely waterproof. Water beads up on the large leaves giving the illusion of a garden of mercury.

Mercury?

What is now known to be a hazardous element was years ago a fascinating childhood toy. A broken thermometer in our house was the beginning of an adventure for my brother and me. Watching the silvery metal bead in my hand – then crushing it into miniscule pieces only to have it reform into a single bead – was a miracle.

If you have broccoli in your garden you may want to run out there this week (there’s going to be a lot of rain in the Chicago area) and you may experience a little of that childhood miracle without the hazard.

A Pumpkin Grows in Brooklyn

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I got this from Jesse’s blog and really liked it! -Bill
There is an update to this here!

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here is my copycatted pumpkin planter. some old boards and an old sheet. it certainly doesn’t look as good as a burlap sack. i had to relocate my peppers to my bedroom window along with the random plants that happen to be growing in my hanging planter. i obviously need more soil which will be gotten tomorrow. hopefully there isn’t too much rain. for tonight my pumpkins will once again sleep in their bucket.

bonus #1 the tomato cage i labored over for far too long. some dowels and wire.

bonus #2 the reflection of my target gnome sheets i scored on clearance for 7 bucks!

may 23, 2009
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Back to it…

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The greenhouse is not the only neglected part of my gardening life. Jesse pointed out that I have not been attending to this blog. Well, he’s right. I’ve been distracted by work, creating a Facebook presence for my photo business, and …well …gardening.

All the spring rains have made everything grow like mad. We have eaten most of the lettuce, all of the spinach (more on that later) and radishes, and a good bunch of turnips last night.

tasty turnips

tasty turnips

Also doing very well are

• tomatoes

• broccoli

• zuccini

• Noah’s pumpkins

broccoli

broccoli

teeny, tiny peppers!

teeny, tiny peppers!

Now, if only I knew what was eating my pepper plants. And …what are those beetles on Noah’s pumpkin plants? Time to get out the insect book. More soon …I promise.

Noah's pumpkin plants are flowering.

Noah's pumpkin plants are flowering.


Is this thing going to eat Noah's pumpkins?

Is this thing going to eat Noah's pumpkins?

Missiles From Heaven!

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Missiles From Heaven

Missiles From Heaven

Today I discovered that Noah’s pumpkin plants are under attack from alien craft using silver maple seed rockets. The one pictured above pierced the pumpkin plant leaf but I am quite certain that the plant will survive.

Beautiful Pests

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Soaked Yard

Soaked Yard

As rain continues to fall it has become evident that my tomato plants will simply not survive. Their roots will not take the water logging they have suffered this spring.

It’s interesting that common weeds in my lawn such as dandelion, violets and garlic mustard are not at all negatively affected by the Chicago area’s second-wettest spring in history. Although these “pests” can be eliminated by modern chemistry (a ritual I resist most years) they can remain under water for days and only become the stronger for it.

It may be the cumulative effect of massive numbers of their kind that makes weeds the pests that they seem to be. Dandelions and garlic mustard reproduce in plague-like portions.

violet

violet

But a close look at many lawn and garden weeds reveals a stunning beauty that is hard to deny. It may be my way of making peace with them but I’ve always enjoyed a myopic view of these plants in small quantities.
Dandelion

Dandelion

Garlic Mustard

Garlic Mustard

Another “pest” with beautiful qualities is the cottontail rabbit. In the photo below you can see a bit of my plan to reduce the numbers of dandelions. In theory, a rabbit with his belly full of dandelions may be too full to eat my lettuce. Well, my plan also includes a fence.
Cottontail Rabbit

Cottontail Rabbit

I’ll comment more about pests when the bugs come out in force. In the mean time, we’ll all hope for some sunshine.

Poetry of Decay

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A couple of times each week I carry my coffee can full of coffee grounds, egg shells and banana peels to the compost pile. That, combined with grass clippings and autumn’s leaves create quite a pile.

But once decomposition begins, the pile shrinks and becomes the dark brownish- black compost that the garden seems to love.

Aside from this wonderful function, I have found a poetic side of decay that is truly beautiful. Our old greenhouse is a monument to oxidation. Rust’s rich color combined with the familiar shape of the tools they once were create odd sculptures.dsc_2344

My neighbor’s rhubarb turns a beautiful color and shape after a series of autumn freezes.dsc_3586

And last year I found a squirrel’s nearly complete skeleton in a corner of the compost pile. Even it’s tiny molars can be seen in the photo below. _wkp0768 dsc_2377

We Begin…

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We’ll see how this gardening thing goes but it’s starting out a little shaky. This is being written on an early April day that began with several inches of snow on the ground. That’s rude, even for the Chicago area. My ancient, falling-down greenhouse has now been further assaulted by the weather.

The greenhouse was here along with several other out buildings when we bought our 19th –century farmhouse about twenty years ago. We bought it because, for a suburban lot, the yard was large enough for our five children to enjoy. It also had a building that we could convert to a photo studio.

our falling-down greenhouse

our falling-down greenhouse

I am actually not completely new to gardening. When my wife and I were first married we coaxed a tremendous amount of vegetables from a 4×30 – foot plot. As children were born and the photography business grew we found neither the time nor the energy to garden. I dropped my subscription to Organic Gardening and Farming and eventually Burpee gave up on us and stopped sending seed catalogs.

With our children mostly grown and my photo business less demanding of my time I have returned to gardening. I dusted off the four 1970’s – era Organic Gardening & Farming issues that survived moves from Illinois to Maine and back again and am determined to pick up where we left off decades ago.

It’s worth noting that the economy has determined one aspect of how we are going to approach this year’s garden. I will not buy something if I can make it or make do with something I already have. It seems foolish to become a gardener that essentially pays $ 12 per pound for the privilege of growing fresh tomatoes. Organic gardening methods not only restore the soil but also save money. So, to the best of my ability and knowledge we will maintain an organic – and cheap – garden.

Along the way I plan to visit my neighbors and their gardens. I’ll report on any good stuff that I learn. I hope I can report on the results of some gardening experiments. I already have had some missteps that, if I am not too embarrassed, I will write about. I’ll use my camera to help tell the story of progress, setbacks, revelations, disasters and ideas.

Mostly I’d like to hear from anyone that may come across this. New gardening ideas, thoughts, comments, and stories are all welcome.