I wanted to write a garden story with a dozen pictures of pulchritude, but it felt somehow dishonest.
Dragging hoses around for weeks has worn me out. At least the North Mercer County Water Department had the courtesy, kindness, and curiosity to call ahead of bill posting time to tell me I’m going to pay dearly once again “How’s your garden growing this year?” they wondered.
“It’s OK,” I said, trying to put a shine on the late season.
What an unnerving year this has been, least of all for those who garden anywhere. Here in central Kentucky, we had multiple damaging windstorms, a dry April and May, then modest rains in June and July, followed by a return to dry again in August and September.
Fortunately, it was not-so-hot in Kentucky.
I want to percolate on Salvisa’s not-so-hot season for a second.
We got lucky.
This has been the earth’s hottest summer on record.
Imagine that.
Imagine what?
Tikkun olam, rabbinical preaching for healing the world, for instance, wouldn’t hurt.
Or laugh at Roz’ Chast’s New Yorker cartoon that features a bug-eyed, bearded street vendor with a pushcart painted with the End is Near, Have an ice cream cone. Why not. Might as well.
We are overheated and overpopulated.
What are we going to do?
I was encouraged to see thousands of protestors in the streets of New York, and around the world, with their foot on the pedal, demanding more climate action.
A few days later, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres, in opening remarks for the Climate Ambition Summit, said, “Humanity has opened the gates to hell. Horrendous heat is having horrendous effects. Distraught farmers are watching crops carried away by floods.”
Kristofer Tigue, writing for Inside Climate New, reported: “For a conference aimed at inspiring world leaders to dramatically ramp up their efforts to combat climate change, the Summit was anything but ambitious.”
Listen to Ezra Klein’s podcast episode: What have we learned from a summer of climate reckoning.This is an expert, rational and unhysterical hour-long discussion on the staggering crisis of population growth, geopolitics and questions of where and how private and public investment will be harnessed for research in wind, solar, long-duration batteries, hydrogen, fusion, nuclear, carbon capture, and so on.
I’m stinking worried, but believe it or not, the Green Revolution, even with amplified hiccups, is making progress.
There is a glimmer of hope, even though we are burning more coal, natural gas, and wood this year than ever before. I am doubtful we are going to reverse worldwide carbon buildup anytime soon. We will be beholden to smokestacks, while waiting for innovative breakthroughs in clean energy. It may be possible to stem the tide, but it is going to be tricky.
Delusional gardening
I am looking forward to next year’s spring planting. I really am. I have a long list of seeds and plants I want to grow. This inspires me, though I realize flooding, tornadoes, flash freezes, and God knows what else could derail my plans before then.
Delusional gardening helps hardwire my brain to accept the here and now and not be such a worrywart. My instinct is to flip the switch and say there will be a price to pay for humanity’s excesses. Existential worries make my head hurt.
Heat is not my friend. M.S. turns my mind to mush; my legs go wobbly. I love air conditioning.
Surely next summer, or the next summer, or ten summers from now, we will suffer through the hottest summer on record in Kentucky. Or not.
Delude yourselves.
Don’t set the bar for utopia. Gardens are NOT, I repeat NOT, wonderful every week, but they might be your salvation.
Put on sunscreen, stay hydrated, and don’t linger in the summer heat too long next year.
Let’s hope the air conditioning hasn’t gone out when you go back inside.
Roz is funny.. her cousin, a good friend of mine, is funny too.. God knows we NEED funny in these times of heat and conflict. I’ve run the blessed sprinklers all summer to keep everything alive here and watered with my hoses places the sprinklers don’t hit. At 75 it has been a big job this year. Decided not to do tomatoes anymore. Just go buy them! And yes, have that ice cream cone!! Eowana in northern Va.. Manassas to be exact.
Eowanna, Roz is hilarious. Glad you kept up with hoses and sprinklers. I’m with you on tomatoes. My best ones grew from the compost pile. Too late this evening, but I’m going out for an ice cream cone tomorrow.
Perhaps “delusional gardening” is a synonym for HOPE. After all, if we have opened Pandora’s Box, hope is the key to survival. Seeds are Nature’s little packages of hope. Keep planting and believe in the harvest.
Thank you, KW Warren. You’re right. Nothing wrong with delusional gardening and it is, absolutely, about trying to stay positive.
So appreciated this read this morning upon returning to my garden after a week away…I will continue my delusional gardening. My 7 year old granddaughter told me to put my worries in a box and put the box on a shelf and forget them! Now for some Ted Drew’s frozen custard that was a gift from a St Louis relative.
Thank you for sharing your climate worries & experience. I am really beginning to understand that the last century plus of exponential burning of fossil fuels must be reversed drastically. The earth will survive, but many of us will not. But there is hope and we need to hold on to that. I recently read Fire Weather, by John Valiant, about the causes & conditions that create the high temp fires that America & the world have been experiencing these last few years. An absolutely riveting read and warning.
Thank you, Jessica. I hope you get a chance to listen to the one-hour Ezra Klein podcast. It’s full of details about fossil fuels and the potential for alternative energy. I just finished James McBride’s Heaven and Earth Grocery. Wonderful story telling. No climate issues in Pottstown, PA in the 1930s, but there were some remarkable townspeople. I don’t know if I can handle Fire Weather right now. Sounds grim. I need a lighter read much of the time.
Gail, take your granddaughter’s advice! Sometimes the garden must wait. I’m sure, after a week away, you’ve probably got catch up ahead of you. I’m with you, I’d forego the work for some good frozen custard.
We had a beautiful summer here in Oregon!
Bumper crops in all our fruit, flower and garden crops, and we are now enjoying plenty of rain and high temps in the mid to upper sixties. Perfect, normal Oregon weather.
Our Mediterranean climate typically gives us warm, dry summers, so watering through the summer is normal for us. I’ve been dragging hoses around our small acreage for 20+ years and my body is getting tired. The best investment I made this summer was purchasing hoselink retractable hoses. They will change your life!
Charlotte, I am so happy you had a beautiful, Oregon summer. I am sure watering must be part of your gardening regimen to some extent. I’m making a note of your hose recommendation.Thanks.
These things (expandable hoses) https://www.amazon.com/s?k=expandable+hose&crid=2JQ54RVCVRHHJ&sprefix=expandable+hose%2Caps%2C144&ref=nb_sb_ss_ts-doa-p_2_15 have transformed garden watering for me, especially since Charles discovered how to repair them. They are so light! And unkinkable.
Yes, we have a short length of an expandable hose. I haven’t quite adapted. Stubborness? What sort of repair discoveries has Charles made?
I also live in central Ky maybe we will have an unusually bitterly cold winter…after all, why not since we are on a roll.
Sally, it wouldn’t surprise me. The ground hasn’t frozen hard for a few years. Hasn’t been so long (10 years?) since it got down to -20 F(-28 C). Much colder than the ordinary. It didn’t stay arctic cold long, and there was a deep snow cover that’s pretty unusual, also. Don’t get me wrong.I don’t wish it to get this cold again.
Thank the Lord for average billing. Irrigation this summer has been rough. I fix one leak and the critters gnaw another one. Zero G hoses have been a lifesaver, for my plants and my back. We hit 100 last Saturday and Sunday, which is nuts, but seems to be the new normal. Still, the monarch’s are beginning to stroll through and the mosquitos aren’t bad. I’m on board with delusional gardening.
Jenny, We got a half-inch of rain on Thursday. Yay!, but it’s warming up to summer levels again next week with not much rain predicted. Oviously, I’ve got to update my hose selection.