Hello there, Rural Sprout readers,
This coming week is Thanksgiving for those of us here in the States. I hope it goes without saying how grateful I am for Rural Sprout and all of you. As we head into the busy holiday season, I usually like to slow things down a bit in our newsletter and share more
personal stories. We all need a break from gardening and growing and weeding and harvesting. The land is resting, and so should we. My hope is that in the coming weeks, this Sunday newsletter will offer a few moments of peace and restoration, no matter what day of the week you choose to read it.
The holidays have a tendency to overwhelm us, no matter how we try to keep them simple.
This is my invitation to make yourself something hot to drink, find a quiet corner, and open up the Sunday newsletter on your favorite portable electronic device for a brief respite from the hustle and bustle of November and December.
You may have noticed that I have an affinity for Christmas cactuses.
This all comes from my Grandma Besemer and the annual Christmas bazaar held at her church. Like most women of the silent generation, my grandmother was industrious. I don’t have a single memory of her sitting completely still, hands in her lap. She was always knitting. Or sewing. Or
doing.
I would walk home from school each day and stay with my grandma until my mom got out of work.
To this day, I can still see her from the yard as I approached her home. Grandma would sit in her rocking chair next to the window, rocking slowly back and forth, her knitting needles flying in her fingers. When I would spend the night at my grandmother’s, even her moments of
sleeplessness were not wasted. I would get up to get a glass of water and find my grandmother reading in bed at 4:00 in the morning.
My grandmother was not an idle woman.
But even so, I was always amazed when, a week before the annual Methodist Church Christmas Bazaar, I would walk in the door after school and find every available surface of the living room covered with handmade items. She would pull out everything she had been working on for half the
year and put it into neat little piles—stack after stack of handknit mittens, several baby sweaters, and hats for all ages. There were always at least one or two incredibly detailed quilts. Thinking back on this, the thing that really blows my mind is that she also made handknit mittens for all her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. There were six Besemer kids, and the Besemers were a prolific bunch. I sat down once and figured out how many mittens she had to make for the
annual Besemer family Christmas. It was…a lot. I was always proud to show up to the Christmas Bazaar and see all of these items on my grandmother’s table. My grandma made that, I would think. I would see her mittens and hats show up on classmates in elementary school. One year, she was set up next to one of her friends from Sunday school, and this lady had plants at her table. They were funny-looking plants with weird leaves and plump red buds on the end of
the stems. She had several on the table that she had grown from cuttings from her own plant.
I think I was eight at the time, and my dad gave me a dollar to spend.
Normally, this was spent on candy canes with pipe cleaner antlers, a red pompom nose and googly eyes glued on the wrapper to look like a reindeer, or a second-hand jigsaw puzzle, or rolls of Lifesavers candies with other gum and candy taped to it to make it look like an
airplane.
But I wanted one of those odd plants—an eight-year-old who wanted a plant.
Odd plant, odd kid, we were a perfect match. I remember bringing the small holiday cactus home and watching it bloom. And then die because I was eight and had no idea how to care for a plant. But my fascination with Christmas cactus stuck. Each fall, I recall my mother taking her huge
plant and carefully setting it on top of the large chest freezer in the cold pantry off the kitchen. It would sit in that cool, dark room, with just a bit of sun coming in from the window in the door to the backyard. It would stay there until early December, when the large boxes of oranges, tangelos and grapefruit from the Rotary Club would join it. Then, Mom would carefully carry it back to the living room to be set on its special plant stand near the window. And it would
bloom just in time for Christmas. These days, I know the large plant I grew from a cutting I received from another grandmother isn’t a Christmas cactus but a Thanksgiving cactus. It, too, has its own special plant stand. I also have a true Christmas cactus and a small Easter cactus. These plants are special and mean more than any of the other houseplants I have acquired over the years. They do more than green up my home. They bring to mind memories of
home, Christmas, and the women of my family who are gone now.
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We started our gardening journey fourteen years ago, growing all of our vegetables and fruits in pots…
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Easter cactus, or Rhipsalidopsis gaertneri, are often confused with their cousins - Christmas and…
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What should you do if you find a mushroom growing in the soil with your potted houseplants? It's not…
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Right about now, there are boxes of poinsettias being loaded into the back of trucks, which will make…
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Where fresh water meets land, the cattail stands tall, its cylindrical seedheads and upright…
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Fermenting chicken feed for your flock can result in healthier, happier hens, shorter molting times,…
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If you grew an amaryllis bulb on your windowsill over the holidays, it's easy enough to keep it…
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Many people are surprised to hear that crabapples are edible straight from the tree. While you might…
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Stewed quince with honey is a recipe of ancient origin, appearing in Roman cookbooks in the late 4th…
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Try a batch of fermented cranberry sauce this year. This sweet-tart side dish adds a healthy dose of…
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That's all for this week, Rural Sprout Readers.
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