Surprise Growth

 
Rooting celery

Rooting celery

 

Today’s thoughts come from me as a kitchen gardener.

One of the things I’ve been doing this strange, stressful year, aside from learning how to make sourdough bread, has been taking various vegetables from the kitchen and seeing if I can get them to grow.

I saw a video a few months ago showing how “simple” it is to root produce that ordinarily would be tossed into the compost after using. I like to garden outside but I’ve never been very successful growing food. I was curious to see if it would work for me.

I started with green onions. They seem pretty obvious since they usually come with roots. I stuck the ends of a bunch of scallions in a glass of water after I finished using the green parts. It wasn’t long before new roots grew. I felt so proud like I had accomplished something major instead of nature taking its normal course and having a lot to do with it.

After the green onion rooting success in water, I moved them to pots with dirt. They still survived and are thriving. I’m so proud of my scallions. I looked in my pantry and inside the fridge’s produce drawer for my next challenge. I thought I’d try an onion since that also has obvious roots. I was successful in creating rot. That was not a horticultural triumph!

I then tried a wilted bunch of celery. It had gotten limp in the fridge and since some herbs recover if they are put in glasses of water, I thought I’d try that with the celery. It works with cut celery. My bunch of celery was not happy. Maybe it was too far gone, but it was not happy and like the onion began to rot.

I left things for a while and turned my attention to the enjoyment of the success of the green onion growth planning how to use all of the ever growing bounty. I did come across another bunch of celery which was smaller than the last one so I stuck it in a jar of water to see what would happen.

Again I left things sit. I changed the water every few days but nothing really seemed to be happening. It wasn’t rotting but it wasn’t seemingly doing anything either.

Then one day I noticed there was something different. The celery looked bushier and greener than it used to. I took it out of the water and nothing there. No roots. And yet, day after day it looked more and more lush and bushy. Who knew celery could be that happy? And then one day after never seeing any roots, they had grown. My celery sprouted roots! I was so surprised it worked!

The surprise growth of roots reminded me that there are times when some creative ideas and projects need to be started and just left alone to sit and do their thing. To be left unbothered and un-poked, until one day the idea is ready and the puzzle’s been figured out. For ideas to develop they need the right conditions. It’s different for each idea and sometimes things have to be tried a few times to see if they’ll work.

Have you had any success with any projects or ideas by just letting them sit undisturbed?

Craft and Design Decisions

In between four Zoom calls today, I spent time working on sewing fabric face masks. I’ve made myself the challenge and promise to make a mask to give away for every two that I sell (see my shop on Etsy). I plan to give away in groups of 25 to whatever organization might need or want them. I’m getting close to needing my first group of 25 masks completed. I have had them all cut out but haven’t finished them. I’ve been wondering why exactly I’ve been dragging my feet with them.

I realized is that while the pattern was seemingly simple enough, there are parts to it which I’ve been objecting to design and craft wise. I made the first mask the way the directions called for. I learned that it’s not as simple to put together as it appears and is more fussy and time consuming to make than I had thought. And the fit has been okay but not great and certainly not adjustable.

Unfortunately I had gotten too organized too early and cut the fabric for 25-35 masks of this type. I’ve been very, very slowly working my way through the pile and have not been as happy with the sewing techniques called to use. I’ve been making adjustments here and there to make it better in my mind.

Some of my delay could maybe be blamed on perfectionism but I did try to let some of that go knowing that what I made would be good enough. I knew that I would like it better if something was different. I just needed some time to sit with it and tinker and try different things to see what would change.

Masks in various stages of completion

Masks in various stages of completion

Today I had a big design breakthrough with the possibility of using a different kind of elastic than I had been earlier. It sounds kind of funny to be so happy about it, but it makes me pleased to know my concern with fit can be addressed with the new elastic. I ordered some last week on the off chance it would work different than the type I had currently. It arrived a day or two ago and I had a chance to try it out with the other style of mask I’ve been making. It works really well there. I needed to see it and use it first to see if it would behave differently before I got too excited about it.

I was feeling dissatisfied with what I was making. I was making to give away to people, but I didn’t want to give these unknown people something that looked nice but which didn’t actually fit. That was part of the reason I was putting off finishing them. Now I’m happy with the way they are turning out and will finish up the masks to donate in a few days. Then I will change the pattern to something else. I’ve figured out how to make this work to my satisfaction, but it’s not a pattern to use long term.

It is satisfying when design, process and execution all work together to make something well. I love when the puzzle pieces come together. Have you had a moment like that recently?