A Favorite Quote

"If you look the right way you can see that the whole world is a garden." from The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Start your own seeds for a luscious garden.

This is the kind of garden we gardeners dream of.  This is the garden of Mr & Mrs Hartman in North Coventry, Pottstown.  Mary Belle has laid her garden out with lovely brick paths in between the rows.  She has a huge variety of plants in luscious colors.
By Pat Moyer
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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Seed Starting

I think I received about 10 garden catalogues so far for 2010.  I love paging through these to see all the beautiful plants.  It is so difficult to decide just which seeds to select each year.  It is fun to try new varieties and see how well they do in my location.

Let me know which garden catalogues you receive and which ones are your favorites.  And...why are they your favorites?  What new varieties of plants to you plan to try this year?

For some great ideas on how to start your seeds this year, read my column in The Community Connection called "The Garden Wayfarer".  I will be posting that in my next blog.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Saving in the New Year

     The beginning of a new year is the time we like to think of new resolutions.  What will we do differently?  What will we try to do better?  The way things are in this economy we all like to think about saving money.  Gardening can help you with that.  If you grow your own fruits and vegetables you can save money on food, not to mention that they taste delicious when you pick them straight off the vine.
     You can purchase many, many varieties of plants in a nursery.  But you can save even more money by starting your own seeds.  It's easy to do and you can use recycled items to get you started.  We'll talk about this some more in my next blog.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Hanukkah

Hanukkah

John 10:22 NLT    It was now winter, and Jesus was in Jerusalem at the time of Hanukkah, the Festival of Dedication. 

     Nine lights on the hanukkyah shine in the darkness.  As I gaze at the flickering flame I think of Jesus and all He taught us as He walked on earth.  Jesus was Jewish and he celebrated the Festival of Dedication also known as the Festival of Lights.  On the Jewish calendar the date of Hanukkah is Kislev 25.  I sit and wonder if that is why Christian leaders of ages past selected December 25 to celebrate Christmas.
      This festival was first celebrated in 164 BC when Jewish people of that day rededicated their temple which had been ransacked and desecrated by Antiochus Epiphanes, an evil ruler of Syria.  As the story goes the Jews could only find one cruse of sacred oil to use to burn the eternal flame.  That cruse would only last one day.  But a miracle happened: the oil lasted 8 days, just long enough for them to prepare more of the sacred oil.  Now the dedication of the temple was complete and they could worship God in all that he had commanded them to do.
     As a Christian I contemplate what God could be telling me with those Hanukkah lights.  Those eight lights represent God’s light in us and the ninth light represents Jesus our Messiah.  He is the servant candle.  The Shamash.  All the other candles are lighted by using the Shamash.  In John 8:12 Jesus said “I am the light of the world. If you follow me, you won’t have to walk in darkness, because you will have the light that leads to life.”   
     When we follow Jesus he sends the Holy Spirit to place his light within us.  Phil 2:15  tells us to  “Live clean, innocent lives as children of God, shining like bright lights in a world full of crooked and perverse people.”  He calls us to be dedicated to Him.  As you celebrate Christmas this year remember that Jesus came to be the light of the world.  Ask him to put his light in you so that you can be a light that shines in a dark and needy world.






Wednesday, November 4, 2009

fall harvest recipe

Let’s try some homemade Hearty Fall Soup



    Fall is the perfect time to make a delicious homemade soup for your family.  My daughter passed on this recipe to me from a friend of hers, so I’m not sure who to give credit to for the original recipe (I changed it a little bit), but I know you will heartily enjoy this delicious concoction.
     Start by putting together this dry soup mix which you can store in an airtight container and use for a couple more batches of soup:
Dry Soup Mix

Equal parts of the following:
Split peas (yellow or green)
Barley  (this is a Bible plant)
Lentils  (also mentioned in the Bible!)
Orzo or alphabet macaroni
Brown rice



Hearty Fall Soup

½ cup dry soup mix (see above)
4 chicken or beef cubes in 4 cups of water
½ stalk of celery
1 onion chopped
Bring above to boil and simmer 1 ½ hours.  Cook the following and add to soup:
½ lb. meat (I used ground turkey)
3 sliced carrots
1 cup each: frozen broccoli/cauliflower
(I used zucchini and sweet peppers and extra celery instead of the broccoli and cauliflower)
Add to pot and heat:
1 can chopped tomatoes
16 oz tomato sauce
1 cup frozen corn
As soup is near finishing add your fresh or dried herbs:  basil, thyme, rosemary, parsley, dried fennel seed, and pepper.  Yumm!