What? No blueprints?

WSU Gardening in Western Washington.

God I hope this has a planting guide for a 4×4 grid. I’m really surprised that I haven’t come across some plant otaku’s obsessive archives of what they did last year, and the year before, and…

I suppose it will be up to me. All I want is a completed planting map that I can run off to the store to get seeds for and whatnot. I’ll learn as I go, I don’t really have time learn why plant X is next to plant Y or to think about what matures when. I wish to stand upon the shoulders of others and it seems that the intarweb is letting me down. Looks like I have to go to the bookstore.

Lucky them.

Brain dead and soakin wet

Being an eejit, it came as no surprise – or at least didn’t piss me off – to learn that I had misremembered the specs on SFG-style raised beds. Not four feet by four feet by 16 to 18 inches, but four by four by SIX TO EIGHT inches.

God dammit. Not 22 cubic feet of soil, eleven. Not four eight-foot 8’x8″x.5″, two. Et fucking cetera.

Oh well. Apparently a double-capacity bed is good for stuff you expect to need more than six inches of depth, carrots, corn mebbe, who knows what else.

As I write this hundreds – possibly thousands – of crows are chattering and squawking over space in our trees. I believe I will step out into the rain to hear the chorus. Atonal it may be, and crows such a successful urban creature that I will grow to hate them in time, but at the moment I do not. I root for them each time I see them climb the skies en masse, pursuing an hallucinated or real raptor or opportunistic gull.

Mappes

someone’s old-skool page of redrawn RPG Maps, including a version of City-State of the Invincible Overlord, that while reproducing the specific details I recall from the map of my childhood, lacks the handmade aesthetic appeal of the original.

Bad soil

The first bed is filled. I shot for a 1/3 each peat, compost, vermiculite deal, per Mel. I ended up with 4 ft vermiculite, 4.4 ft peat (which was a bitch to declod, it was hard and dense like rocks – therefore the peat might be more than 4.4 ft), and SEVEN feet of compost. The mix is still not black enough for my tastes, so I might add some more gook.

I was projecting 22 ft to fill the 4 x 4 x 1.5 bed, and that still seems right – 16 + 8 = 22, but what I have in it now was sold as 15.4 feet. So color me confused.

Oh, the bill for today’s dirt, NOT free like air, was $94. At this rate it will indeed be cheaper to just buy thedamn veggies at the store, and a sight faster besides.

I should note that I while I am committed to this process, I am HATING it. It’s much more physically pleasant in Seattle’s cool climate to perform the tasks associated with this process – measuring and cutting and digging and shit like that – than it was in the climate I was raised in.

My parents encouraged me to help them with their gardening and so forth, and I HATED every second of it. My awareness of that antipathy led me to avoid buying a house for years after I realized it was in my – and Viv’s – financial interest. Three years on, I have certainly confirmed that my antipatthy to homeownership is not reflective of adolescent rage or of Midwestern summer swelter – I still hate it the associated labor just as much as I did as a kid, and I certainly do not subscribe to the ‘safe as houses’ superstition.

I regularly awaken in fearful anxiety dreams associated with our mortgage. In essence, I genuinely do not believe that owning this house is in my economic, financial, or emotional interest.

Yet my rational analysis of my goals is at odds with this.

Returning to gardening, I have found – YES! – something else to hate. When I am engaged in heavy physical labor, I tend to be extremely goal focused, and become incredibly rageful at the least little goal diversion, such as rain, clay-dense peat, a cramped workspace, or other such quotidian challenges.

I don’t enjoy spending time with myself in this state, and there’s little doubt in my mind that my lifelong avoidance of, you know, sports, housework, and exercise is due to the painful self-loathing that these helpless, vicious rages generate. I’m told, of course, that the rest of humanity does not experience that murderous anger whenever their adrenals spin up, but do not believe a word of it.

You do not want to spend time with me, nor I you.

four by

4×4 Kitchen Garden potential plans.

First bed built, not filled.

Back of the excel spreadsheet calculations forecast more-or-less $125 per bed construction costs. So far, before soil, I’m at $64. I estimated 24 cubic feet of soil for a 4x4x1.5 fill (4×4=16+(4×2=8)), at $3/cuft, $72+64 = 138. Looks like right now I’m coming in high.

Also, these prices seem TOTALLY OUTRAGEOUS.

Seen

On Friday as I began my drive home from work, I was at a stop light on Royal Brougham Way, between the stadiums and right across from the main entrance to Safeco Field.

As I waited, a big, balding man with shoulder-length white hair and a soup-strainer mustache, also white, came out of the stadium, holding a fistful of Mariners literature close to his actual vest and pocketwatch chain.

He was trim and tall in the jacket and vest of a grey tweed three-piece suit over jeans and black boots, sort of a cowboy look, sans hat. His boots were square toed and plain.

As I looked at him, I thought to myself, geez, that guy looks a lot like David Crosby. The light changed, and I dove off.

This morning, I as I read the paper, I noticed an ad for the June 6 appearance of Crosby Stills and Nash at Chateau Ste. Michelle, which features current headshots of all three musicians.

There’s no question: the guy I saw emerge from the ballpark was David Crosby, looking fit.

Now, I do hear tell that the Mariners have signed a Crosby lately. I wonder if it’s a two-fer.

Shared

Or, I could just use the shared internet over bluetooth feature that comes with The Missing Sync.

As I am right now.