A Pea Plant Grows Indoors
I buy as much organic food as I can. I figure I’m supporting
responsible farming, Mother Earth, and my family’s health. I try to plant my
garden responsibly each year so that when it’s harvest time, our veggies are
the best they can be.
But it wasn’t planting time yet when I discovered a green
pea that gotten lost in the shuffle of the vegetable bin. It started to grow on
its own so I put it in some dirt, in a small pot on the windowsill, just to see
what would happen. At first it remained the same, a tiny bit of green peeking
up from its gritty bed. But then it started to grow. And once it began, it
continued sending up a delicate shoot toward the sun. Then leaves sprouted and
viney tendrils began reaching for anything they could grab onto. And then a pea
pod appeared with one beautiful, plump pea inside! How exciting! We had our own
sugar snap pea plant. It makes me eager to get into the dirt and get the garden
ready.
I am always amazed at how food grows. A seed gives no hint of
what it will eventually look like but holds all of its potential wrapped inside
that tiny package. Sometimes, like the pea, you can see its final form but it
first must grow into the plant to take root and nourish its development. The
cycle assures the survival of the plant.
And not so far from our own survival as a species. We can
see our roots in our children from the genetic resemblances to the acquired
characteristics. All of nature passes along what keeps things going in our
evolutionary process. Parents to children to grandchildren and beyond. Pretty
wonderful, I think.
Here is how to grow your own delicious snap peas:
http://www.gardeningblog.net/how-to-grow/sugar-snap-peas/
Sounds like fun, I think I'll try it. Right now, I'm waiting for my avocado pit to start growing. I do love etching that one develop.
ReplyDeleteOooooooooooops, meant to type watching that one.
ReplyDeleteDon't worry, Claire, the avocado doesn't mind. And the (one and only) pea was delicious.
ReplyDelete