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Photo: Home & Garden
Television

Gardeners typically share their bounty with
neighbors, friends and even perfect
strangers.



Gardeners make the world beautiful. How many times have we walked
around a corner or driven past a yard or public area and said,
“What a beautiful area! I had no idea this was here.”



I know of no other group of folks who give so much of themselves
as the people who dig in the dirt.



Who else plants so they and everyone else who comes into contact
with their garden can come away renewed with the sights and
scents of a little bit of nature?



A Gift of Beauty



An elderly lady lives two streets over from me. When out “taking
the air,” as folks used to say, I make a point of going by her
yard.



Just on the corner, a ways away from her windows, is a
continually changing patch of garden. I can count on seeing
asters in the fall, grasses in winter, daffodils and peonies in
spring and myriad zinnias, lilies, roses and marigolds in
summer.



I know she tends that patch just for the passers-by.



Giving Produce Away



Who else but a gardener would compost all year to enrich the
garden soil, then go through all the tilling, seeding, weeding
and fighting bugs and diseases just to give the
produce away?



Thousands of gardeners are doing this throughout the nation with
Plant a Row for the
Hungry
,” an initiative of the Garden Writers Association of
America and Home & Garden
Television
. My friend, Jim Wilson, is a leading advocate of
this program, promoting it in speeches throughout the country.



Feeding Thousands



This idea has fed thousands upon thousands of people with nearly
a million pounds of fresh produce — starting with just an idea
and willing hands from small groups of gardeners who
probably give produce to their friends and neighbors, too.



But be careful — don’t compliment a gardener. I’ve found that
when I praise their plants, gardeners try to give me a cutting or
a plant. “I just happen to have one in the cold frame,” they’ll
say.



Don’t try to protest, “But I don’t have a place for it.”



They’ll simply counter, “That’s all right. I know you can find a
place somewhere.”



A Horticultural Zoo



Of course, this is the reason a true gardener never has a
landscape, but rather a horticultural zoo. You know — one of
each from every place.



In this time of the year when we reflect on friends, family and
those who make life good, let’s remember gardeners.



You may not be intending to give that gardening friend anything
for Christmas. But you can be sure that, in true gardener
fashion, they will always give to you.