LUPESCAPE Forum Index
RegisterSearchFAQMemberlistUsergroupsLog in



Is the Magic of Gardening Dying a Slow Death?

 
Reply to topic    LUPESCAPE Forum Index » Other View previous topic
View next topic
Is the Magic of Gardening Dying a Slow Death?
Author Message
sangbmt



Joined: 26 Jan 2011
Posts: 266

Post Is the Magic of Gardening Dying a Slow Death? Reply with quote
Recently, a well-known gardener who has an outstanding gardening blog wrote a post saying that she had received an assignment to write an article for the magazine entitled Washington Home and Garden. In her post this gardener invited suggestions, comments, and ideas from her readers on topics that "they" would write about for a magazine with an “upscale suburban readership.” The following represents my comments to this post.

Congratulations. Since variety is the spice of life, I am going to write from an entirely different perspective than the views articulated by your other commenters (who, by the way, made some excellent suggestions and comments) Smile

The Gardening Imagination

I am very concerned that certain rock solid, healthy, meaningful, productive, rewarding, and therapeutic activities such as gardening are dying a slow death. Let me explain. Right now in our country there are millions upon millions of people who have gardens. Thousands of these individuals will go out-of-state to visit other well-known gardens and countless others will go online everyday to read about gardening. These people have what I call “the gardening imagination.” These are the people who have been bitten by the “gardening bug.”

With such a vibrant gardening "base," you may ask, where’s the evidence that gardening is dying a slow death? Please continue reading for the answer to this question.

The Desire To Involve Yourself in Gardening

Anything, including gardening, needs to be passed on to future generations if it is to survive and prosper. I recently read a blog post about a farmer/gardener who is in his 50s or 60s and who fondly remembers getting involved in gardening at seven or eight years old because he "wanted to garden badly.”

Does anyone out there get ANY indication, with extremely few exceptions, that the youth of today want to “garden badly”? My sense is that the vast majority of today’s young people don’t want to do much of "anything" badly except drive around with their friends, watch TV, party with their friends, listen to music on their iPods, talk on their cell phones for hours with their friends, play online games, and “hang” with their friends.

The Blind Leading the Blind

Perhaps I am missing something here but what in the world is so “special” about doing absolutely nothing that can be called productive or meaningful with your friends? To me, this is just an extreme example of the “blind leading the blind.” The result: many, if not most of our young people are staying away from healthy, outdoor physical activities (such as gardening) similar to the way they would avoid the plague. Let me state the obvious: this is NOT progress, this is NOT healthy, and this is NOT making a meaningful contribution to society. It is, however, to use a gardening term, a great example of "horse manure."


best way to lose weight
lose weight fast
Fri Feb 04, 2011 5:57 pm View user's profile Send private message
Free Forum






Post ForumsLand.com

 
Display posts from previous:    
Reply to topic    LUPESCAPE Forum Index » Other All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to: 
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum