First time since 1999! The last time I did it was a cold night in November of 1999 and I ended my run at my girlfriend’s apartment in Fairmount. Good thing I married that woman so I could run it (8:25s) with the son we had together.
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Today’s Books
I’m going to try and keep track of the books coming into my house. Had another great trip to Port Richmond Books today (watch out, Richmond Street is closed) and found two things:
A paperback copy of Nell Painter’s Standing at Armageddon: A Grassroots History of the Progressive Era. I had read much of this book studying for my oral exams, along with the other syntheses of this time period including both Alan Dawley’s, Jackson Lears’s efforts, but I didn’t buy a copy then. Seven bucks, not bad.
Now PRB has a crazy collection of dictionary/words/writing/style/usage books that are spread across a couple of shelves. I love these books, love reading them, picking at them, hoping I’ll get the perfect description of how to use a particular word or how to manage parallel constructions. Today I found a hardback copy of “The Complete Stylist” by Sheridan Baker. I’d not seen his other books but this 1966 book had a number of cool looking chapters that I wanted to wander through.
More gardening updates
Kara and I planted two strains of peas in the side bed up front. This bed gets sun from early in the morning until about 1P, so I’m hoping they’ll take.
We also planted a bunch of starts in the middle bed in back. Four red-leaf ($1.78), four arugula ($1.78), four spinach ($1.78), four butter nut ($1.78), and four broccoli plants ($1.78). We’ll see how it goes. This was the bed where I grew tomatoes last year.
Lots got done this weekend
Started getting the beds ready in both the front and backyard. I can’t get to the Fairmount recycling center during the week (close at 3PM) and their weekend hours don’t begin until April), so I loaded some Lowe’s manure/compost into all five banks. I’d cut Peat Moss in already, so there should be plenty of natural, aerating components in the ground.
I’m debating adding some vermiculite as well. While I really like the intensive gardening approach (Mel’s mix is 1/3 compost, 1/3 vermiculite, and 1/3 peat moss), I’d like to know more about the science of how this works. It feels like there should be some academic writing about a different soil composition is absolutely necessary in order to load up a garden this way, but I don’t feel like looking for it right now. I do know that there are crazy thick books about soil and I know that’s not going to get read. I’d also like to see what was there before Mel Bartholomew; where did he get his idea from? Had no one else ever attempted this way of growing things? (His book offers no clues).
Either way, I went to a great seminar hosted by the Penn State Extension Service Saturday morning on Square Foot Gardening. While there was no shortage of earnest folks — is this a necessary trait for gardeners or simply for folks who go to seminars on Saturday morning — it was a well constructed, well-organized, seminar that moved fast and had lots of good information.
One interesting point: worry less about what compost you use and more about using multiple sources. I need to dig more into this topic, too.
Great afternoon
1. Daughter wants to ride bike through West Philly. With me.
2. Daughter wants to go to used bookstore.
3. I say — first thing you want to do at a bookstore is look in the window. She picks out the book in her hand, by herself, with no prompting.
4. My work here is done.
Saturday, Starting Greens
Kara and I worked hard to get our greens started today.
We used Organic Mechanics Seed Starting mix, the egg cartons we always save, and planted a bunch of greens:
Lettuce
Winter Density
Marvaille des Quatres Saisons
Green Oak Leaf
Susan’s Red Bib
Burpee Organic Green Leaf
Apart from the Arugula, which has a germination time of 5-7 days, everything else is 7-14 days. That’s when we find out whether this system will work:

Total cost:
El cheepo Home Depot Green House: $25.00
I bought it basically for the prefab plastic cover. Our little cat would tear up the plants otherwise.
Two grow lights and four t12bulbs: $60.00
Seeds: $20.00
Plant starts range in price. At a 1.00 a piece, once we get 100 plant starts, we’ll break even. I’m hoping I can get the greens into the ground next to rows of direct seed to judge the two against each other.
I also want them out in time to start all of the basil and tomato plants.
Two thoughts
Re-reading one of my favorite series from childhood with my son. I love it more than he does and, just as my daughter can’t help but laugh at my willingness to use Little House on the Prairie as a source of wisdom, he goes along with it, maybe just to have me read to him before bed. Anyway, as young Taran speaks to Dallben at the beginning of the series, he notes the following:
In some cases we learn more by looking for the answer to the question and not finding it than we do from learning the answer itself. This is one of those cases. I could tell you why, but at the moment it would only be more confusing. If you grow up with any kind of sense — which you sometimes make me doubt — you will very likely reach your own conclusions. They will probably be wrong. However, since they will be yours, you will feel a little more satisfied with them.”
Lloyd Alexander, The Book of Three (New York: Square Fish, 2006), 9.
We saw Louis CK in Philly and he raised a similar point, saying something like, “you should listen to people who are older. They know more stuff. They may be wrong but at least in being wrong they are basing it on more knowledge.” (I know I’m butchering a really fine bit).
What I’m thinking about tonight is how we come to feel the edges of our own ignorance, how we come to sense our own blind spots. For better or worse, I don’t see the world in black and white terms any longer (life was much easier when I did), but I still think about things, or debate stuff, or talk about ideas while teaching, knowing that there’s a real possibility that I’ve left out something important. This isn’t false humility — cue shitty Boston accent, “the true measure of education is an awareness of your own ignorance” — but this realization I’ve had over the past few months. When presented with a choice, I’m much better at seeing all manner of options, but I’m not sure that my decisions are really improving. What is getting better is my ability to, as Dallben suggests, feel a little more satisfied with them.
—
Anyway, back to gardening. I viciously pruned the rose bushes in the front yard after seeing this article in the Guardian. I pulled weeds out of the front and side and put down chicken wire to keep the cats off of the ground now that the soil isn’t frozen.
You can barely see them but there’s two cardinals living in the back garden. Look in the bush:
Bit of decorating
Our kitchen done…on the Wooden Box Site
Pictures here:
Love these guys. Plan on posting public recommendation soon.
Favorite picture:
Here’s the new exterior, with a sleepy, sick Colin:

















