An excerpt from this story was published in Reminisce Magazine May 2020.
When I was growing up on the farm in Saskatchewan in the sixties and seventies, my mom’s garden took centre stage. A woman’s garden was a great source of pride and elicited a bit of neighbourly competition. Every summer my siblings and I worked and played in the garden.
Starting in 1947 and continuing for over fifty years Mom planted her garden in early May. She covered the tiny seedlings with Styrofoam cups with the bottoms cut off to protect them from frost. The Hubs once said it looked like a smurf village.
Mom’s favourite flowers included her precious gladiolus or her “glads” as she called them. She carefully planted each bulb with an empty milk carton around it to protect and support the burgeoning plant. As the season progressed a beautiful array of colours burst forth from the plants. Every fall she faithfully dug up and stored her bulb collection in the root cellar. She had originally ordered the bulbs from the mail order seed catalog. The arrival of the seed catalogue every spring was cause for celebration, as it signalled that another long prairie winter was coming to an end.
My parents planted a large patch of potatoes, dug them in the fall and down the chute they went into the bin in the dirt floor root cellar under the house. In the spring, we hauled the remaining potatoes back up out of the root cellar and they were used for seed and the cycle continued.
Mom had a pumpkin patch and we loved to peer through the foliage to try and spot the biggest pumpkins. When the season was ending, we hauled wheelbarrows full of pumpkins into the shop so they could finish ripening. A row of sunflower plants stood next to the pumpkins like sentinels guarding the patch.
When I think about Mom’s garden, my fondest memories are the walks we took with her through the garden, eating peas, apples and berries warmed by the sun and using the garden as our playground.
Years later I still marvel at the amount of work Mom put into her garden. The hours she spent planting, watering by hand, weeding and picking. That doesn’t even include the time spent processing the fruits and vegetables. The thing is, I don’t remember Mom ever complaining about doing any of it. What I do remember is Dad coming in from the field and Mom showing him the canning jars she had filled and the way he looked proudly at her with admiration in his eyes.
Years later I still marvel at the amount of work Mom put into her garden. The hours she spent planting, watering by hand, weeding and picking. That doesn’t even include the time spent processing the fruits and vegetables. The thing is, I don’t remember Mom ever complaining about doing any of it. What I do remember is Dad coming in from the field and Mom showing him the canning jars she had filled and the way he looked proudly at her with admiration in his eyes.