A Garden Update: End of the Season
Ben Ashby
I am never a fan of the end of the season, but I realize it is necessary, and in many ways is a metaphor for life. The end of the season comes with the overgrown beauty of the untamed, but with the knowledge that that freeze and frost will soon bring it all to its knees. The return to the earth is a beautiful one, but one that is filled with sadness. Soon the ground will be bare and uncovered, dormant, at rest for the cycle to begin again.
I roam the garden each day, especially in the golden light of the warmest hours of the day. I notice the small changes of color, of remaining growth, of the breakdown of the once mighty stalks and blooms. I still find beauty in it all, even if all the zinnia blooms have been harvested for seed.
The gourds continue to dry, but soon must be taken in to the barn so they can properly dry. My goal is to have five giant bushel gourds for next year’s displays. There will be two dozen loofas to turn into sponges for Christmas time gifts. I believe gardening should be a communal thing. I grow an abundance so that I can give it away. I believe a fruitful life is parallel to having a garden that produces an excess.
The tobacco sticks, used for staking the tomatoes and for fences, are slowly removed so the bush hog can come through. My fear is if the garden is left totally to its own it will be a mud filled mess come spring. I envy those that can left their garden winter on its own, but soon the technologies of man will be used to clear the garden in a way that’ll ensure an early spring planting….one that I will soon begin to prepare for.