living in the garden home2
Courtesy of Amazon.com.
 
In his book, Living in the Garden Home. P. Allen Smith talks about his passion for gardening and the early influences of his family on the development of that passion.  I have often said that I grew up with dirt under my fingernails and between my toes from the hours upon hours I spent in the vegetable gardens of my grandparents and from the flower gardens of my great grandmother who thought grass was a weed.  It was from them that  I, too, developed an early passion for putting seeds into the ground and nurturing them to maturity.
 
 
PAS hoe 2

 


It’s unexplainable for the most part, but I don’t think there’s a time during the year when I’m not thinking about gardening in one form or another.  Smith says it this way:

“…there is something more than a memory that tugs at me each spring.  All it takes is the slightest hint of warm air after a long cold spell to lure me outside with shovel in hand to turn over the earth, kneel down, and plant a seed.  I simply cannot imagine a spring any other way (8).


 

Just as sap begins to rise in the trees in early spring, the yearning to get my hands in the dirt also rises.
 
 
hand with soybeans
 
 
Recently, courtesy of The Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board,  several other bloggers and I were able to spend a day with Smith at his Moss Mountain Farm Garden Home in Roland.  Part of that day was spent touring the amazing home and  phenomenal gardens  that surround it.  The threat of rain, thunderstorms and, yes, even tornadoes did not dampen  our spirits or our enthusiasm.
 
 cloudy landscape

 

asparagus detail
 
This was my second trip to Moss Mountain Farm.  During March, several of  my sweet life  buddies and I spent the day touring the home, some of the gardens and the acres upon acres of daffodils fully in bloom.  It was a windy, sun-filled day of early spring promise that I will share photos from also.  I think it must be such a pleasant treat to awaken with each season at Moss Mountain and to the surprises each holds.
 
 
daffodils


 
 

Daffodil days and


 
orchard bee

 

bees in a buzz
 

swans



swans a’swimmin’
 

 

chickens2

 


chickens of all sizes, colors and shapes

 
 

silkies


sweet lambs nursing

all say.”Welcome to  Moss Mountain, our garden home.”

 
lambs2

 

And what of the gardens?


 

“…the scene on a garden’s canvas never remains the same.  Plants grow; change their shape, color, and size and cycle through the seasons in ways that can’t always be anticipated.  So as I garden, there is this intangible quality of mystery and an element of the unknown that works right along with me influencing the final picture (8).”

 
apple espalier



 
 

 

apples

 
swiss chard
 
 

yellow rose 2
turtle

pink rose
 

 
Herb garden detail
 
 
“I’ve come to think of gardening as a way to partner with nature.  It’s a joint venture in which we both share a measure of influence.  As I move around piles of soil, build structures, and select places for the plants, nature does her part in supporting my efforts, and on occasion, she bursts in to completely redesign my plans and remind me of who’s actually in charge (8).”
 
 
faucet detail
garden tools
 
 

 
garden gate detail

 
 
 

bug
 

  
“It’s a humbling reminder that despite my best efforts, I’m never really in control of anything (11).

donkey

For me, my garden is a spiritual place. A meditative place.  A place of harmony.  It doesn’t matter if I’m planting seeds or pulling weeds.  There’s always a quiet, peaceful time for reflection and a soothing of the soul.
 
 
A spot for quiet meditation at Moss Mountain Farm

Ecclesiastes 3:1-8
To everything there is a season,
a time for every purpose under the sun.
A time to be born and a time to die;
a time to plant and a time to pluck up that which is planted;
a time to kill and a time to heal …
a time to weep and a time to laugh;
a time to mourn and a time to dance …
a time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing;
a time to lose and a time to seek;
a time to rend and a time to sew;
a time to keep silent and a time to speak;
a time to love and a time to hate;
a time for war and a time for peace.
—Solomon
 
 
Next up: Bean2Blog: The Bean 
 
 
Disclosure: This post is about the 2013 Bean2Blog event, where P. Allen Smith and the Arkansas Soybean Promotion Board invited twenty bloggers from Arkansas to learn about soybean production in the state and to see how gentleman farmer, P. Allen Smith, has transformed his acres into an amazing dream-come-true.   I received no compensation for attending other than a super-cute t–shirt (okay 2, there’s a story about the 2nd one coming later), a few soybeans and a gift bag  of soy candles.  Oh, and they fed us some really yummy deliciousness. All opinions are mine.