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[personal profile] ceelove
I was ruminating on some kind of gardeny updatey thing, while I harvested this morning.

Like, there are tomato hornworm cemetaries, their innards becoming the stuff of parasitic wasp larvae instead of my plants becoming the stuff of hornworm innards. I encouraged the wasps with plants that lure beneficial insects. Permaculture: it works, bitches!

Or, ye gods, when I plotted this garden in the winter and planted in the spring, I expected it to be feeding, y'know, plenty of people. Now and for many weeks this summer, I'm the only one in the house eating measurable amounts of it. You can imagine the plotting I do to prepare and share my surplus, which is both great and surreal. I was going to take pictures of today's ridiculous bounty and mock-lament my fate of how to deal with it.

But with my hands full of harvested cucumbers, I met an old homeless Asian man on the sidewalk. I see him around, harvesting recyclables for the return fees. We found enough English and gestures between us to transfer several pints of cukes and tomatoes to his keeping. He was clearly very pleased, and I was very glad to give them to him, and yet the whole thing left me with an overall feeling of pensiveness and melancholy. I share so much food, but it goes to my friends, who are not undernourished. It was pure chance that I could give my fresh veggies this one time to someone who really needs them, and pure chance will not feed him well tomorrow, nor the hundreds of millions who spend much of their lives hungry.

So. Lots of happy ruminations on gardening going gloriously well. Rapture at the plants bejeweled with tomatoes, harmony with the pollinators so busy alongside me, a fair sense of awe at what my hands and some soil and the sun have wrought...all somewhat muffled by sorrow at how very rare it is for people to have this kind of luck and magic at hand.

Date: 2012-08-21 04:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gentlescholar.livejournal.com
Check out the Boston Food Bank. You might be able to drop off stuff there?

Date: 2012-08-21 05:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moonshadow.livejournal.com
I hear you. In addition to what has already been talked about, this suggests to me a larger issue. Which is, so some of us are committed to certain principles, gathering certain skills that we believe will serve us well even if/when our society changes dramatically. What about the people who make other choices? What are our responsibilities toward them?

Date: 2012-08-21 06:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mathhobbit.livejournal.com
That is a wonderful thing that you have done. It's so easy to exclude people from our community when we live in such dense populations.

Date: 2012-08-21 08:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dakotakym.livejournal.com
I'd really enjoy connecting with you sometime for permaculture geekery (we exchanged kombucha culture awhile back, though I don't think we've met in person yet)..
What have you planted in particular to attract beneficial insects? My hornworms also seem to have been devoured by wasp larvae, much to my delight.. I'm thinking it was the anise hyssop that the wasps liked, but I'd love to know about your experiences, too.

Date: 2012-08-23 11:54 pm (UTC)

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