Here’s one of my monthly newsletters that goes out to my subscribers. This one is from May 2015 and is all about challenges, new discoveries, and a brand new product from Wild Ozark.
“Greatest” Challenge
Are you often faced with challenging situations to figure yourself out of? It seems I get to encounter “greatest” challenges often. Sometimes they’re tech related, as when I’m trying to learn how to do something new to or correct a problem with my website.
Sometimes the challenges are physical, like when my body thought it could go no longer while we were working on fences here around the homestead.
For the past week and a half, my new challenge has been Mother Nature.
Specifically, it was the wind at the farmer’s market. Today (I’m writing this on Saturday 4/25) the wind was especially brutal. Signs kept blowing over, plants were toppled off of the shelves, and it was blowing from the beginning. I didn’t even bother to put up the television that runs the DVD in my booth. The booth itself tried to blow away (but thankfully that was tied to the truck, and a kind customer held onto one of the legs for me). My business cards have probably traveled on the wind all the way to Newton county by end of day. I had to close up shop early.
Even with the distraction of the wind, the booth is at least a “storefront” and I’ve been enjoying talking to people who come in about ginseng and the habitat where it grows. If you’re in town (Huntsville, AR) on a Tuesday or Saturday morning, swing through the town square and say hello!
(update 2018: I’m not sure I’ll be there again this year, so be sure to check back with me in spring to find out)
What’s for sale at the booth?
Well, not ginseng anymore. I’ve already sold out of all I had. Remember how I’d said my seeds didn’t sprout? More about that, below. What I do have is elderberry, wild strawberry, wild red raspberry, spicebush, pawpaw trees, witch hazel trees, gooseberries, and a few other things. I still bring some bloodroot, goldenseal, wild ginger, and blue cohosh. Once the doll’s eyes and black cohosh blooms, I’ll bring that too. I didn’t label the pots last year, so I’m waiting for blooms to be absolutely certain which is which.
Procrastination Confession
I’ll share my poor planning so you can avoid doing the same thing – I didn’t plant while the weather was still good, and then it started snowing and freezing and by then I didn’t want to go outside much, let alone try to rake leaf litter off of frozen ground. And then once it warmed up again, well, that’s when the rains started.
So it was a major oversight on my part and it won’t happen again if I can help it. If for some reason I do have to hold them longer, I’ll have to give OzarkMountainGinseng.com a call to help me with the proper way to do it. I know it involves a bucket of damp sand in a cool, dark place. But better yet that I not procrastinate again.
(update 2018: I kept the seeds in a bucket in a cellophane-not plastic-bag with live moss. I put the bucket in a closet in a room that doesn’t get heating/cooling but does stay above freezing. They did great and the ones I still have left now in January 2018 are starting to “smile”.)
Now that the tender woodland herbs are done blooming and would fare poorly in the heat, I’m bringing more of the medicinal and edible plants like yarrow, All-heal, elderberry and some of the shrubs like spicebush and gooseberry.
April Blog Post Index
- A Ginseng Sanctuary at the Compton Gardens in Bentonville
- Black Cohosh or Doll’s Eyes? Companion Look A-Likes
- Sleuthing the Bellwort. Sessilifolia or Perfoliata?
- An Entourage of Green Ambassadors
- Sun Splashes, Tree Silhouettes and Flowering Woodland Herbs
- Does Ginseng Stewardship Benefit the Landowner?
- Solomon’s Seal Unfurling
- April 2015 Newsletter