Tag Archives: garden

Bee Jam

I am a sucker for good jam. It’s not my fault. It’s in my DNA. My earliest memories of my dad are of him spooning heaps of strawberry goodness into his mouth, directly from the jar. Why bother with toast?

When life gets overcomplicated, the kitchen is a soothing place for me work things out. I can transfer the energy into something else. Something beautiful and delicious. I’m not just after the end product, but the pleasure of the steps along the way. The feel of the smooth wood floor under my bare feet; the cold kitchen tiles; the grain of the wood cutting board; the razor sharp knife; the sun coming through the windows; the hound dogs roaming, searching.

They enjoy the pursuit, too.

Yesterday I found myself in the kitchen with a gorgeous bowl of kumquats purchased from the Santa Monica farmers market. I love kumquats, but I know for many they are an acquired taste. They are simultaneously sweet and intensely sour – a perfect metaphor for many things going on these days.

I began the process by pouring boiling water over the fruits (just to soften them up a bit), then I halved them and threw them into a pot with equal parts honey and water.

Then the magic happened.

The kitchen door was open wide, which connects to my back patio of flowering lavender, and the garden beyond. Once the pot of fruit and honey began to boil on the stove, the bees started to arrive, almost on cue. They hovered, they buzzed, they flew around the kitchen with glee, smelling and searching for the sweet reminder of home.

It was a brief communion, as so many things are…their search for home inside my home.

Once the orange sticky mass cooked and cooled down, and the last of the bees flew back outside, I spooned the mixture into a pretty teacup that my friend Marylee (the bee lady) gifted me many years ago.

The kumquat marmalade was delicious – a bright, shiny, bittersweet mixture, eaten directly from the container with a spoon.

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Simple Sunday

We had such a lovely morning, and I learn so much from watching my son and dogs. They know how to keep it simple. It’s the ‘smarter’ grown-ups who over-think, over-analyze and over-complicate things. We worry too much about what we ‘should’ be doing or if we are making ‘good’ use of our time.

Not kids and dogs. They pretty much do what they enjoy, move on when they’ve had enough, and rest when they need to. It’s really simple, and appealing, and I feel like the more I watch my son and two hounds, the more I get to track things back to a place that is exactly as it should be. It feels right, it’s so basic and it’s always been there. I’m grateful for the reminder.

This morning, my son wanted nothing more than to sit under our massive backyard tree and pick seeds out of the huge pomegranate we’d purchased a couple days prior. There were hundreds of seeds in that ancient fruit, and we were determined to extract each and every last one (not quick work – if you’ve ever done it – you know what I mean). I set him up at the little table with his sky blue kid’s apron, a plate to hold the pomegranate halves and a bowl in which to place the seeds. He had a ball, and was covered head to toe with bright crimson juice when it was all over. Then we sat together in the sun and devoured the seeds and juice. Heaven.

Next he wanted to comb our raised veggie bed, taking stock of the up and coming harvest: eggplants, hot peppers, broccoli, herbs and greens. He grabbed a basket and made me a nice little “Mom’s salad mix.” I love that.

My dogs were also up to their usual antics. Mostly sleeping, and then scouring the yard for a smell that apparently wasn’t there five minutes ago. I’ve placed an old mirror that belonged to my friend Marylee in the garden. Today I caught the Beagle watching her reflection; when the Basset sees himself, he usually barks hysterically at the intruder. Sweet simplicity everywhere.

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Garden Muse


It would be nice
If he had
A soft mouth and sweet disposition
So that when he spoke,
Petals of kindness
Fell from his lips.

His heart
Would drip dappled sunlight
Under an old oak tree -
A safe haven to expose myself
Without fear of being stung.

Ideally, he’d stand tall and strong
So that his sparkling eyes
Would meet my own -
At night there’d be stars
On the horizon.

Barefoot
Among the flora and fauna
His other-worldly beauty
Would blend
With every bloom.

{Jill Lurie}

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Love Garden

Tending
Our old love garden -
Watching a season
Slip through my fingers.

Entire forests
And fields
And a celadon sea
Pulled through my chest.

Open hole,
Tenderly waiting
To be filled.

{Jill Lurie 10/31/11}

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Garden Club – The Learning Curve

They say that teachers learn as much as they teach. I definitely think that’s true. While I’m certainly not a teacher at my son’s school (I leave that to the paid saints), as a parent volunteer I do assume the ‘instructor’ role for a few hours each week during Garden Club, which is now in full swing.

Last year I was lucky enough to have a partner to co-run the operation – a friend and fellow parent. But now that she’s moved out of the city and on to greener pastures, it’s just me and 20 kids each week making our way through the dirt, weeds and worms.

I’ve definitely learned a lot, even in the past few weeks since school began:
1. Things turn out a lot better when you have no expectations…at all…whatsoever.
2. Let other people help you. Repeat: let other people help you.
3. Things don’t need to be perfect for them to turn out exactly as they are supposed to.

Since there is no way for me, as one person, to do everything or get it right every time, things have been a lot more fun and relaxed once I gave into the flow of Garden Club, rather than trying to perfect it. If my intention is for everyone to have a positive experience, then it really doesn’t matter if someone gets a wet shoe, a dirty fingernail or if an eager little hand accidentally breaks the limb off a tiny plant. Shoes will dry and plants will grow back.

I’ve also learned to be less harsh on myself. Specifically, I no longer feel I have to do EVERYTHING on my own as I originally went into this thinking. Nobody likes a martyr, least of all me. To this end, I’ve gently asked some of the other parents to step in from time to time to help fill watering cans, move tools or assemble the kids when it’s time to line up and plant. Yes, even I can learn. Sometimes the parents are willing to help, and sometimes they just aren’t in a space to do so. Since I’ve let go of how it needs to turn out, I’m not attached to who helps and who doesn’t. I’m grateful when someone can step in, and quickly move on when someone says they don’t have time to help.

I’ve also been amazed by the kids. Either by luck, or chance or thanks to the garden fairies, we haven’t had any more trouble since our initial watermelon incident. The kids have been excited, sweet, helpful and curious. Their enthusiasm and gratitude is, truly, adorable.

A couple of weeks ago, when we did our Fall-themed planting, I thought to myself that I wish I’d made time to stop at the grocery store to pick up a pumpkin to decorate the planter box. But I didn’t have time, and I decided that was ok. As luck would have it, one of the girls just happened to bring a home-grown pumpkin with her that day to decorate the garden. Go figure. When I asked her what prompted her to bring the pumpkin, she said, simply, “It just seemed like the right thing to do.” I love that.

This past week, while I did make it to the nursery to buy more plants and the hardware store to purchase new watering cans, I simply didn’t have the energy to go to the thrift store, as I’d originally planned, to purchase clothes to spruce up the scarecrow. I made the decision that it was more important for me to arrive at the garden – and the gaggle of kids – with enthusiasm, patience and energy than complete an errand that would have only worn me out.

As ‘luck’ would have it another student just happened to bring a shirt and hat for our scarecrow. It worked out perfectly, and now that little girl will be able to look at the garden and see a piece of herself in there, too. In allowing myself to not have to do everything, it creates a place for others to find their place, as well.

In the end, it is just Garden Club after all. Mother Nature’s had the whole system worked out perfectly for thousands of years, it’s us humans who are just catching on.

I love that a "Garden Angel" keeps watch over the plants

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Do What Ya Like

At the beginning of this year I found myself in a very unfortunate situation that inspired a very positive outcome. I made a spontaneous new year’s resolution that I’ve kept the entire year – and it has been one of the most fun and lively years of my life. This was my resolution:

I am no longer doing things I don’t want to do.

One more time:

I am no longer doing things I don’t want to do.

Here’s how it works:
If there is something I want to do, I do it.
If there is something I don’t want to do, I don’t do it.

Now before you picture me lying in bed with a glass of wine while my six year old runs around the house with no dinner or clean underwear, you can relax.

I’m obviously talking about my Free Time.

We all have Free Time, some of us more than others – those blissful hours or minutes each day or week we get to spend however we like. Unfortunately for me, I found that for years I was spending much of my ‘free time’ not feeling so free – doing things that I felt obligated to say yes to, because I thought I was supposed to, or because I worried about hurting someone’s feelings.

A small miracle occurs when you turn the ship and decide that everything in your life (more or less) is going to be there because you want it to. Yes there are chores, work, etc. that can’t go away, but if you fill your Free Time with what you love, it makes everything, on the whole, seem much more balanced and manageable.

This might sound really basic or idealistic or impossible to some, but I’ve tried it the other way, and I can say without a doubt that doing what you like is much more fun.

Since I am no longer spending my weekends doing things I don’t want to do, there are big openings for me to do the things I LOVE. This past Saturday that meant a visit with my son to the magical garden at Venice High School here in LA (my husband spent his Free Time doing what he wanted to do – take a nap).

It was the Learning Garden’s Pesto Madness fundraiser. For $10 you got an all you could eat buffet of freshly made pasta, salads and homemade desserts; a pesto cooking demonstration with fresh basil from the garden; and a wonderful tour of the one-acre site by Master Gardener David King, who runs the entire operation and teaches a variety of classes there. All for a good cause.

It was a beautiful way to spend a couple of hours and a wonderful reminder that doing what you like is one of the nicest gifts you can give yourself, and in turn, those around you.

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Garden Club 101 – The Watermelon Incident

The garden is adjacent to the yard, but feels tucked away once you're in it

As the Official Garden Lady at my son’s primary school, I don’t just get to wear mismatched outfits, a large hat and a laminated badge. I also get to witness how a few planter boxes serve as a microcosm of how life works.

Every week we meet for a few hours after school learning about where food comes from. We have a good time digging, finding worms and ladybugs, weeding, watering, pruning, sweeping and planting. And every week I am amazed at how it all plays out. Today was the first Garden Club of the school year, and so it all begins again…

My son shows a new student and his mom the garden for the first time

There are The Regulars who I know from last year. I love them. They know the lay of the land: what to do with the hand shovels; where to fill the watering cans; and how to maneuver the red wagon through the maze of kids and coiled hoses. They arrive with smiles on their faces, are glad to be there, and then get down to business. They make my volunteer job a real joy. I can leave them alone for a few minutes and trust that they are not going to throw soil in each other’s faces or eat plant food when my back is turned.

Then there are the First-Timers. Shy, timid and unsure how to ask where they fit in with the gaggle of kids, I have to seek them out. I coax them into the environment like a newly transplanted seedling. They need time to acclimate. Once settled, you can see the wonder in their faces, the joy. Sometimes they even tell me, “Miss Jill, this is the first time I’ve ever planted a plant – EVER – in my Whole Life!” Their exuberance is innocent and genuine – such a pleasure to witness and support.

Unfortunately there is a third category, which I have to come into contact with from time to time. These are the wayward kids who are passing through between kickball and pick-up time. They use the garden as just another place to carry on with their playground antics: swinging shovels, pointing sticks like toy guns and on occasion, committing the cardinal sin of Garden Club: picking a plant before it’s ready. They make it not very fun for the rest of us, and test my skills in patience, compassion and keeping my language G-rated.

Today a group of drifters came in as a break from their flag football game. Unlike the Regulars who outwardly discuss how much they love being in nature and watching their food grow, I could tell these nine year old boys were most interested in stirring things up – but not in a good way. Dirt was flying, and they tried to implement a ‘digging race’ between the boys and girls. I was doing my best to keep the peace without having to resort to throwing them out altogether.

It all came to a head when, as an attempt to extend the proverbial olive branch and re-direct the energy, we gave the newcomers a tour of what was growing. I let one of my favorite Regulars – a fourth grade boy – lead the way. He pointed out our artichokes, strawberries, herbs and the last of the tomatillos. But it was the watermelon that proved too hard to resist for the drifters. A seedling we had planted last spring, there was one sizable fruit on the low growing vine that had made it through summer neglect. We should have known better.

After the tour, the boys were on their way, but within five minutes of their departure, my favorite fourth grader discovered the offense: not only had one of the boys pulled the one and only not-ready-to-pick watermelon right off the vine, he had stomped it into mash on the ground.

This set the garden Regulars into a tizzy. We now had a crime scene on our hands.

The ‘good kids’ were beside themselves about what had happened, how unfair and simply unkind it was. “We worked so hard, we planted that watermelon months ago, now we’ll never get it back.” It’s an innocent and sweet response – and they are right.

A group of us walked across the yard to talk to the offenders, explaining that we expected them to be respectful of the plants and of all the hard work we had put into the garden. I told them that we’d taken care of that watermelon for almost a third of a year and they destroyed it in five seconds. No surprise – the boys could care less.

Their indifference put my fourth grade helper over the edge and he insisted that I either make them pay for a new plant or purchase a watermelon from the store that the garden club could eat as a snack. I liked where he was going with this, even though I told him I couldn’t press charges. My six-year-old son suggested we solve the problem by installing an electric fence around the plants. The fourth grader’s response to my son was not that this would prevent us from actually getting into the garden, or would be dangerous, but that “electric fences cost, like, $500, so we can’t afford it.” The consensus of the rest of the group was that I never let those boys in the garden again.

I told the garden club kids that I was as disappointed and upset as they were. But I also tried to point out that while we lost the watermelon, we’d had a great two hours in the garden and that we should focus on the positive, like the fun we had and all the new veggies we’ll be planting next week.

Truth be told, it’s hard to know what to do. How do you have a response that is, well, responsive, without being over reactive? Do you give the offenders another chance to redeem themselves, or would that turn into just another opportunity for them to be destructive? How do I convey to the Regulars that I’m there to protect their hard work, while not being exclusive of the kids who perhaps made a one-time lapse in judgment?

So much love goes into that school yard garden: a watermelon is not just a watermelon.

Mistakes and disrespect come in every form, at every age…so does kindness, gentleness and forgiveness. Today I witnessed both. Such is life in the schoolyard garden.

Everyone (mostly) works together, and every day in the garen is a new adventure!

Catnip and Borage blend into a beautiful display

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How a yellow rose, a painting and the bees taught me to believe

A yellow rose in my garden, symbolizing friendship and love

When you are extraordinarily lucky, you meet someone who supports, encourages and lights up your life like nothing you’ve ever experienced before. They change everything. There will always be your life before and your life after your time with them. You are never the same.

I strongly believe that while the body dies, the soul inside of it lives on. The deepest part of who we are is immortal, and it’s this essence that connects us all together. It is always there, taking different forms, showing up exactly when we need it, in a way we can recognize, even if our minds have trouble understanding. I wish I had a logical, scientific explanation for this. I do not. But it’s something that is as real to me as the air I breathe, which I know keeps me alive, though I cannot see it.

I met Marylee when I was 13 years old. I was in awe of her sense of joy, love, generosity, passion and fun. She never held back, on anything – ever. She was the definition of living life to the fullest. I think she lived three lifetimes in her brief 56 years.

To me she was a mother, friend, confidant, and mentor. In short, I adored her. We had 16 amazing years together. Soul mates come in all forms, and she was definitely one of them.

Together we loved food, gardening, art – basically anything that was delicious, beautiful, tactile or fun. We loved to spend all day in the garden, sometimes visiting three plant nurseries in a single day. Then we’d get dressed up for tea or a yummy meal. She was all about pleasure and enjoyment, something she helped me explore and discover for myself.

When Marylee died I was four months pregnant. I could not mourn; I had new life inside of me. Connecting with a loss that great would have destroyed me. In a sense, my unborn son protected me from that. His tiny body growing in mine kept me insulated. As I watched her body and face become unrecognizable in her final days, I sensed that some part of her soul was imparted into my belly.

Life moves on and I was now a busy new mom. In 2007 I timidly decided to take a meditation class. I had never meditated before. But a hectic home life with a crazy toddler prompted me to give it a try. I needed to do something. Since running away to Tahiti in search of calm was not an option, I knew I needed to find some inner peace without having to actually travel anywhere.

The class was intense, powerful and extremely helpful. We were taught many exercises, one of which was called the “Rose Exchange.” Our teacher asked us to imagine our heart as a rose which we exchanged silently with a partner in class. It was a beautiful way to practice the transfer of loving energy.

The next day I decided to try it again alone at home, this time imagining that the person sitting across from me was Marylee. It the three years since she had died, I hadn’t really tried to connect with her. I didn’t know how, I didn’t think it was possible.

But the class was opening me up, and though it felt awkward at first, I pushed forward. During this ‘exchange,’ I was surprised to find I got a very strong sense that Marylee was actually there, and that her heart’s rose was a vibrant yellow color.

It was her birthday the next day, so I decided to take a bouquet of yellow roses with me to her garden plot at the cemetery. I left the flowers beside her name, and for some reason, even with the heavy storm, I decided to take a drive around the large cemetery, which dates back to the late 1800s.

A large free-standing crypt far on the other side of the property caught my eye. I felt this strong sense that I was meant to get out of my car, in the pouring rain, and look inside the glass windows. As I approached the little building, which was clearly a family crypt, I found myself immobilized when I got close enough to read the name on top: Lee.

Lee was a nick name that Marylee occasionally went by, and it’s also the middle name we gave our son to tie us together. I slowly approached the leaded glass windows, soaked by rain at this point. I didn’t care. I looked inside, a bit scared at what I might find, and though I knew I was crying, I could not discern the tears from rain: the entire interior – or heart – of the tomb was covered with hundreds of bright yellow silk roses. They covered nearly every surface of the walls.

Ever since the first yellow rose, which I now know symbolizes friendship and love, it has re-appeared many times: when I need to feel a connection to Marylee but especially when I’m doubting it. The same year I gave Marylee a yellow rose on her birthday, I had a special visit with the bloom on my own. As a treat, I signed up for a session with a personal trainer named….Lee. He arrived holding a single, bright yellow rose and said, simply, “I know today is your birthday and when I saw this in my garden, for some reason I felt it was meant for you.”

The rose kept appearing but I still had trouble believing. My heart and mind were at odds. Was all of this a coincidence? Always a skeptic, I still needed more ‘proof.’

So I sat down around that same time and tried to contact Marylee again to ask if all of this was real. As a very logical person, this was way out of my comfort zone. But I did it anyway.

I sat down on the floor with no script, instruction or plan. I basically ‘imagined’ myself connecting with her. I asked her for a sign that she was with me and sat there, eyes closed, waiting. Would I ‘see’ her or feel her brush my shoulder like in the movies?

For a long time nothing happened. Then I heard a loud buzzing sound and decided to open my eyes, figuring that nothing was going to happen that day. I went looking for what I thought sounded like a large fly. What I found was a bee buzzing around my family photos on a table in the corner of the room. In the nearly six years I’d lived there, I’d never seen a bee in my house. There had been flies, moths, mosquitoes and even birds, but never a bee. I opened the window to let the bee out. Then I sat back down, one last time, asking for a sign. Three more bees immediately came through the back door and once again hovered around my family photos.

What was happening? I knew nothing about bees, or animal symbolism or ways in which souls can communicate. Marylee would have known that I was a skeptic, and that I’d need some sort of ‘proof.’

So I did the next logical thing we do in our modern world and Googled ‘bee symbolism.’ I read in awe:

“Bees are considered to be messengers between worlds. They symbolize rebirth, immortality and mother.”

I was stunned.

I also learned that bees symbolize achieving your dreams, doing what seems impossible (based on their body weight, bees technically should not be able to fly) and enjoying the sweetness of life that is the reward of hard work (honey). Bees live in the garden (as I often do) and transform the heart of flowers into a golden, sweet elixir. What could be more perfect?

Even though the bee (and the yellow rose) kept visiting me at exactly the right moment, my mind was still holding me back (I am a hard sell). I could write ten chapters on all of the magical synchronicities that have occurred between Marylee and I (since her passing) but one thing in particular finally made me a believer. I’ve never looked back since.

It was April; almost a year to the date of when the yellow rose (and the bees) first appeared. I was on Rose Avenue, down the street from Marylee’s old house. I was walking to my car after a yoga class, past a café where she and I had spent many fun afternoons. I was running late and needed to pick up my son.

But for some reason, I felt compelled to walk into the café. I was not hungry. I did not need to use the restroom. Something pulled me in – by then I had learned to trust the inner voice calling me.

I walked into the café and looked around, still not sure why I was there. And then there it was, pinned high on the wall: a nearly seven foot tall watercolor depicting a redhead in a garden…dancing with a bee. I was in shock, as I had spent innumerable times meditating as a way to connect with Marylee – always picturing myself in the garden with her as the bee. I caught the artist’s faint signature. It read, simply, “JT.” My name is Jill Tracy – I was looking at a mirror of myself.

Stunned, I spoke to someone at the café and inquired about the work. I was told it was installed the previous weekend, on April 20 – Marylee’s birthday.

It was also explained to me that the artist’s intention for the painting was to symbolize a relationship or communication between the redhead and the bee, something that took place in the garden.

I knew I needed to purchase this painting, which was far more expensive than anything I had ever imagined giving myself permission to own.

I had a personal savings account that I’d held onto for a long time. The cost of the painting was within 100 dollars of what I had left in my account. Fears of being too lavish or irresponsible almost crippled my decision. But I studied art, I love art and I knew this painting was meant for me. It really did symbolize believing in all that is possible, and I knew Marylee was telling me that directly, and wanted me to live with that reminder every day, never giving up on my dreams.

This felt like a once in a lifetime experience – I decided to go for it. I made an appointment for the sale of the artwork. When the time came to go to the café and pick up my precious item, I could not find my checkbook anywhere. With no way of paying for the artwork, and now running late for my appointment, I needed to stop at the bank.

And the whole time I knew intuitively that all of this – each and every last part – was happening for a perfect reason, even if that reason was not initially clear.

I put on one of my nicest dresses and adorned myself as if attending some sort of ceremony. For me, this purchase was ceremonial. The painting symbolized my crossing over to recognizing, believing in and experiencing a world that had previously seemed impenetrable. It also symbolized believing in my dreams which was something Marylee hugely supported. She had always encouraged me to push far beyond what I thought I was capable of, “You have to look for a path you cannot see,” she’d tell me.

I could feel Marylee around me as I entered the bank and walked towards the teller to obtain a temporary check. I knew I could have quickly filled out the slip of paper at the counter, but something made me want to take my time with it. If this entire experience was really a ceremony, I wanted to honor each step.

I saw an empty desk and chair on the other side of the bank. Whoever worked there must have been at lunch or out that day. I sat down and watched my hand slowly write out the letters and numbers. Then I signed my name – something I’d done thousands of time before, but rarely with as much care.

With the completed check in my hand, I wanted to get to the café as soon as possible – I was excited and didn’t want to be late. But then I remembered to slow down and savor each part.

Right then something on the far end of the cubicle, on a table behind the desk, caught my eye. It looked like a greeting card, but I wasn’t sure. I don’t usually make it a habit of being nosy in people’s personal space, but I couldn’t help myself – it was out in the open, after all.

I got up and walked over to the card so I could see the image up close.

This is what was on the cover:

A painting of a redheaded fairy dancing in a lush, green garden, surrounded by bees.

Under the image, it said, simply:

“Thank You”

This photo does not do justice to JT Steiny’s watercolor, which is an impressive 6.5 by 5.5 feet, and covers the entire wall of my workspace, reminding me to savor the sweetness of life and never give up on my dreams

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