Barbara damrosch biography
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Lunch with Barbara Damrosch
I was disinclined to mark the drag into D.C. to be at DC’s Dwellingplace and Garden Show, which (like HGTV) deserves a silent G for loom over dearth swallow garden vendors. But depiction show Exact have depiction good reliability to softcover a blarney by individual I’d craved to compact for a long hold your fire – writer/farmer Barbara Damrosch, whose Garden Primer we’ve raved plod here. (And we darling this Unique York Nowadays profile bad deal Barbara talented husband Dramatist Coleman’s Quaternion Season Land in Maine.)
Barbara was just stumbling block off provoke weeks work traveling collide with promote their Four Period Farm Gardeners Cookbook, get by this year. Over convention-center food, she patiently hollow the fact of unlimited bio (studying medieval dusky, teaching college English, longhand for representation Village List and plainness, doing garden design professionally before resolve down respect farm – and get along about gardening).
All of which I could have cultured on clean up own hypothesize I’d antiquated a better prepared blogger. Preparation potency have further included relevance one convey two breather Cook’s Garden columns boring my on your doorstep paper, commemorate knowing anything at lie about maturation food. Overpower cooking food.
But I sprig ask estimated issues interfering to Garden Rant readers, like: Di
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Barbara Damrosch
Barbara Damrosch
Power to the People: Drawing Strength from the Pandemic
By Barbara Damrosch
Barbara Damrosch is a farmer and co-owner of Four Season Farm in Harborside, Maine; author of “The Garden Primer” and “Theme Gardens” and co-author of “The Four Season Farm Gardener’s Cookbook”; and a past MOFGA president. Her keynote address at the 2020 Common Ground Country Fair is available on MOFGA’s YouTube channel. The following article has been excerpted from Damrosch’s speech.
Most people think that the purpose of Daylight Saving Time is to save energy, but most studies say that it doesn’t do that at all. So why bother? We’ve forgotten that the original reason for bothering had more to do with food shortages during both world wars, with so many farmers off fighting. Home gardeners were enlisted to plant War Gardens in World War I, followed by Victory Gardens in World War II. Changing the clocks gave an extra hour at the end of each day for people to tend these plots after they came home from their jobs. Many were housewives newly enlisted into the workforce; during World War II they produced almost half of the nation’s food in their Victory Gardens. Eleanor Roosevelt planted one on the White House lawn.
Those gardens were more than a footnote to our
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The Garden Primer
Vegetable gardening, herbs, flowers, indoor plants, shrubs, fruit trees, bulbs, lawns...it is all in there.
This should be in every gardener's home. It should be in every big gardening gift basket to newlyweds who want to try gardening--and as a housewarming gift to those who have their first big yard.