gardening

RIP: This Organic Life

Your mom likes to bounce around, my husband told our young adult son. I am fairly certain he was referring to the reading material I had packed for our recent four day trip to West Texas. But, honestly, he could have been referring to any number of my ADHD tendencies. In this case, yes. It was my reading material. And, yes, I did plan to bounce around. Why else would one pack five magazines and seven books to read over four days if one wasn’t planning to bounce around some?

One of the books I packed was Growing, Older by Joan Dye Gussow. I had pulled it off the shelf – once again – to try and read. I had numerous failed attempts at reading this book, as evidenced by the various dog eared pages throughout the first twenty or so pages of the book. Yet, here I was, once again drawn to read this book.

Why did I not devour it as I had her previous book, This Organic Life: Confessions Of A Suburban Homesteader? If one were to ask me for a list of my five all time most favorite books, This Organic Life would be on the list. If one were to ask me if there was one book I had read multiple times, again – it would be This Organic Life. Why, then, could I not get through Growing, Older? Ah. There it is. Why did I not notice this or think about this as I was packing!

That subtitle.

A Chronicle Of Death, Life and Vegetables.

Death. “Growing, Older begins when Gussow loses her husband of forty years to cancer.”

One simply does not read a book on cancer and death when one’s husband has cancer. And one certainly does not read a book on said topic while on a four day road trip where one’s husband is doing a 24 hour bike ride that supports a cancer organization. Yet, there I was. Growing, Older. Determined this time to read it in its entirety. I pulled it out and tried to pick up at the current dog eared page. No. I would need to start over from the beginning. Too much time and too much life has passed since my last attempt at reading Gussow’s book.

It would be fair to ask: Why was I so determined to read this book? Well, Gussow’s earlier book was simply so good, so inspirational, that I couldn’t figure out why this book felt entirely different to read. Ah. Cancer. Death. It felt too ominous, too personal. More from the back cover reveals my own anxiety. “Without a partner, she continues growing her own year-round diet – while bucking popular notions of how ‘an elderly widowed woman’ should behave.” There it is. My own fears. Very early in my husband’s cancer journey, he nearly died from surgery complications. Not cancer. But surgery complications. That experience is still raw. And – to be brutally honest – I yelled at him, “How could you almost die already? You haven’t even starting fighting cancer yet and you almost died!” Growing, Older brought all of those emotions and memories flooding back.

Our trip to West Texas for the 24 Hours In The Canyon bike ride was certainly not an ideal time to try to read this book once again, yet by the time we got home I was more than halfway through the book and even more determined to finish it, which I did just a few days later. I am thankful that I finished the book, but it won’t be one I read again and again, as I have with This Organic Life.

I don’t recall where or when I bought and first read This Organic Life, but it was published in 2001, which was the year I had to leave my much-loved job at an organic garden center as I was first on bedrest due to pregnancy complications, then a mom to a premature baby boy. I had a lot on my plate in those days and for many years after, but I would – from time to time – be drawn to this book for a quick re-read until – at this point in my life – I can nearly recite entire passages and open the book and quickly find a quote that I want to reference. It feels like an old friend by now, which is why, after finishing Growing, Older, I was interested in searching the author’s name online and was saddened to read that she had passed away last year, just a few days before my dad passed away. Gussow was 96 years old at the time of her passing, perhaps a testament to the value of eating one’s own homegrown organic vegetables.

I talk often about my original garden, the one I started thirty years ago. It was organic from the start. No chemicals have been used here since we acquired this piece of earth. Somewhere in those first few years of gardening I discovered antique roses and it was love at first sight. Within a few years, a couple of antique roses led to a dozen led to 150 at the height of its glory. I always left room for herbs and a few vegetable plants, but my original garden was primarily a rose garden. My husband had asked me early on to please, leave a bit of grass and I took him at his word: Bit. We have a bit of lawn. Over the years, sod was removed for new flower beds until now – from the street out front to the back fence line – nearly every inch of the property is devoted to my gardens.

Rose Rosette Disease is an awful virus that is spread by a microscopic mite and it tore through my garden like wildfire around 2012. Over a two year time period, I had three distinct waves of RRD and – in the end – my rose garden was reduced to only four roses that somehow avoided the mite and the virus. I was still in the midst of figuring out my “What Next For This Garden?” when I had several autoimmune health issues and one nasty neurological disease pop up. I spent the better part of a year living on toast as that was one of the few foods that I could tolerate eating. During this time, much of my garden went feral – the roses had been removed but nothing planted to take their place. Then Covid hit. My doctors were all in agreement: I was way too sick to get Covid and I needed to avoid any risk of exposure. The seed for eating locally grown food had been planted years prior, when I first read This Organic Life and admired Gussow’s passion for, in her own words, “year-round local eating” and “vegetal self-sufficiency.” During those early Covid lockdown weeks, sending my husband to the grocery store with my grocery list, I realized it was time to start shopping at the local farmer’s market that I had long wanted to attend. Perhaps I could grocery shop in the open air and improve my health by eating locally grown produce? I got to know many of the vendors, including Cardo, who began growing microgreens back in the 1970’s while he was in college. I slowly started trying new foods and seeing improvements in my health. Cardo sparked my interest in microgreens and growing unusual fruits and vegetables. This Organic Life was pulled off the shelf once more and re-read, this time with a deeper interest – Could I grow my own food? I had the empty flower beds, just waiting for my “What Next?” Could I pivot from a flower gardener to a vegetable gardener? This Organic Life was the perfect manual I needed – filled with inspiration and advice. Gussow’s garden in New York may be vastly different than my garden in North Texas, but all gardeners face the same challenges at some point in time – too wet, too dry, too hot, too cold and – What about those pests?! Sure, I don’t have woodchucks and muskrats, but the feeling of walking out to the garden in the morning and finding the spaghetti squash – the one you have patiently been waiting to mature – half eaten by a squirrel is the same sort of Mr. McGregor angst.

Five years have now passed since I first started converting my gardens over to food production. I have had some derailments along the way, with both my ongoing health issues and my husband’s cancer taking over some of my time and energy. But to everything there is a season, a time when one needs to sit back and just feel the peace of the garden and then there are times to move forward. I am so thankful that I have (finally!) read Growing, Older as it showed me that life moves on even in grief and that you can bury a lot of sorrow in the garden. I am so thankful that my husband and I are both doing well at the moment and that I am able – in this season – to devote more of my time and energy in to growing my own food. I wish I had been able to meet Gussow during her lifetime, but I feel a bit of her every time I am able to prepare a meal with my own harvests. May her spirit live on, inspiring future generations.

Keep calm and garden on.

(Photograph above shows my harvest on June 1st, 2026. I garden in zone 8b in Southern Denton County, Texas.)

gardening

Why art thou dreaming!

“Heart of mine, why art thou dreaming!
Dreaming through the weary day,
While life’s precious hours are wasting,
Fast, and unimproved, away?” ~ Mary Ann H. Dodd

Life is filled with precious hours, slowly ticking time off, yet how often we spend them dreaming away the time. Next year, I will conquer this thing. Next month, I hope to do that thing. Next week? Tomorrow? Tomorrow! There are always dreams. There is always time. Until there isn’t.

Cancer is a beast. A beast that has touched my life again and again. My uncle. My aunt. My father. Neighbors and friends. My husband’s aunt. My husband.

One evening in May, 2023, my husband went out for his typical post-work bike ride. The following morning, he urinated straight blood. Was it a one-off experience, brought on by strenuous biking, or something more sinister? Thankfully, alarmed, he called his family doctor before even exiting the bathroom. Thankfully, he kept that doctor appointment scheduled for just a few days later, even though there was no more visible blood in his urine. An in-office urine collection was filled with microscopic amounts of blood. Thankfully, the doctor, suspecting a kidney stone, sent him right away for a CT scan of his abdomen. Thankfully, everything moved so fast – a month from the first symptom to the first surgery. Alas. The beast, cancer, had touched our lives once again. This time, up close and personal. Bladder cancer. The same cancer my father had been diagnosed with just a few years earlier. My father – a male, a life-long smoker and fire fighter – was in three high risk categories for bladder cancer. My husband? His only risk factor was being male. Yet here it was. That beast.

The first year after diagnosis is always a blur, or so we have been told. Surgeries. Treatment plans. Endless doctor appointments. “This is so surreal,” I must have uttered a dozen times a day, trying to make it make sense. He is always the healthy one, I would tell everyone. Never sick. Never a broken bone. Never a surgery or hospital stay. How do you answer that common greeting, “How are you doing?” How is he doing? How am I doing? How are we doing? To quote The Beatles, “I get by with a little help from my friends.”

Year One rolls in to Year Two and the numbness starts to wear off. No more surgeries. Just treatments, biopsies, scans and more doctor appointments. Year Two, my father died of cancer, though not of his original bladder cancer. Merkel cell carcinoma. Another beast had entered our lives. We are now in Year Three of my husband’s battle with this beast. Bladder cancer is highly recurrent. A lifetime of scans and monitoring. In the words of his urology oncologist: As long as you are biking and fighting, we are monitoring and treating. We get by with a little help from our friends. My husband’s biking community has been outstanding. Their love and support, we feel it. It warms our hearts in ways we could never fully convey.

“Tell me, what is it you plan to do 
with your one wild and precious life?” ~
Mary Oliver

Last year, my husband set a biking goal for 2026: To compete in the 24 Hours In The Canyon biking event at Palo Duro Canyon State Park. This year, the 20th anniversary, the event was held over the last weekend of May – from noon on Saturday to noon on Sunday. The ride supports The Cancer Survivorship Center, which serves adult cancer patients in the Texas and Oklahoma panhandle and let me tell you – It was an emotional weekend! Nearly 50 of the riders, my husband included, are cancer warriors. To see and talk with others that have been touched by the beast named Cancer, to see the community of road and mountain bikers come together to support one another while also supporting a wonderful cancer support organization, to know that so many people changed their dreams into plans to put in the training and dedication it takes to ride for 24 hours, to know that so many gave of their time and energy and volunteered to support this event… We all get by with a little help from our friends.

Now I know this is primarily a gardening blog and this begs the question: Does this have anything to do with gardening? Yes, though perhaps indirectly. You see, my husband has been so blessed to be part of a local biking community, and I have been blessed to belong to a wonderful gardening community.

In an article from 2023, Amy Doneen wrote, “A sense of belonging in a group can significantly impact a person’s mental health, reducing anxiety, stress and loneliness. Humans have traditionally lived communally, looking out for one another, supporting one another and sharing in the joys and challenges of life. It is a beautiful fact that our lives are more fruitful and rewarding when we share them with others.” This past weekend, at Palo Duro Canyon State Park, we felt that sense of belonging, sharing in the joys and the challenges of life. My husband biked 194 miles over 24 hours, in challenging conditions, to come in first place for his age bracket. His trophy sums it up: “Cancer doesn’t sleep, why should we?”

Cancer is now our ever present. That uninvited guest that showed up at suppertime and stayed the night and the next day and the next week. Life’s precious hours are wasting away. It is up to each of us to make the best of our time here on earth. What will we do with our one precious and wild life?

“The man who has planted a garden feels that he has done something for the good of the world…. It is a pleasure to eat of the fruit of one’s toil. To dig in the mellow soil… is a great thing. One gets strength out of the ground…. There is life in the ground; it goes into the seeds; and it also, when it is stirred up, goes into the man who stirs it. The hot sun on his back as he bends to shovel and hoe, or contemplatively rakes the warm and fragrant loam, is better than much medicine.” ~ Charles Dudley Warner

My husband bikes and I garden. He flies down the road on two thin bicycle tires while I stay grounded at home, tending my garden. I loved spending the weekend at Palo Duro Canyon, camping under the full moon, waking to the birds singing. I loved seeing where my husband’s training, planning and hard work took him. I also loved returning home, rushing out to my garden and harvesting what grew in the few days we were away. I loved making supper tonight with the fruits of my toil – zucchini, peppers, onions, garlic and green beans – knowing that fresh organic homegrown produce nourishes our body and soul. May we all be blessed with a passion that enables us to turn our dreams into plans, that gives us a sense of purpose in life, that leads us to our tribe, our community.

Keep calm and garden on. Sow some seeds of kindness today.

Photographs taken June 1st, 2026. I live and garden in zone 8b, southern Denton County, Texas.