We are about to dine off roast chicken and dressing and baked onions & apples. “Plenty of onions,” says you, and I agree. – Ina Dobson to son Vance, Dec. 31, 1933
| Myrtle Dobson (left) and her sister, Pearl Dobson Sanders |
On the previous post, Hallie commented that in 1935, the Dobsons had lived here over 40 years and were still taking notes on what worked best. She observed that the experiments never end. Yes, Ina’s little notebook indicates that someone, probably her daughter Myrtle (a.k.a. Lynn), suggested the need for garden recordkeeping and set her up with the little notebook. I see that Ina missed a few years. Perhaps Myrtle wasn’t around and it wasn’t so important to Ina. I can relate because I have a garden journal now, and I not only forget to make notes but forget that I even have it! I understand the desire to keep organized records for review the next year, and maybe Ina did, too. I just don’t think Ina was totally on board with the process.
| Pearl Sanders, Bernice Dryden Dobson, & Myrtle Dobson |
Gardening is an experiment, and Ina’s notes leave out a lot. When did she plant? When and how did she fertilize? When and how much did she harvest from her garden? Why was her bean crop short in 1935? Did she plant again late in the summer for a fall crop? Did she hoe the weeds or did Grandpa Jack? I think rodents were a problem, but I’ve heard that prior to Dworshak Dam, the deer ran mainly on the other side of the river. I know the garden wasn’t fenced.
At any rate, the vegetable garden was important to subsistence living. Today, 55% of the American diet comes from processed food, contrasted to less than 5% in Ina’s day. During the summer, they had vegetables in abundance – at least in a good year. Imagine – 11 tomato plants for two or three people! I plant three, and if they bear, it’s enough for the two of us. And why on earth did she need two rows of lettuce? She doesn’t mention spinach. Maybe she couldn’t plant early enough for spinach. Maybe they just didn’t care for spinach.
It’s clear from her notes that Ina loved onions, grew plenty of them, and served them as a side dish. The only time we actually eat onions is when included in pot roast, but my research shows that they are quite nutritious.
Ina also grew plenty of potatoes, but there’s no mention of corn in her notes, but I know from the family letters that Grandpa grew popcorn. In December 1932, Aunt Shirley wrote that “we have so little popcorn this year as something got so much of it before we gathered it in.” My dad was proud of the corn on the cob he grew here for years, but he didn’t grow popcorn.
Gardening is weather-dependent, and in Ina’s day, the weather was different. She saw late frosts and wet soil in the spring, and it could turn cold and frost in August. The growing season was definitely shorter then than now.
Growing up here on the farm, my dad’s knowledge of gardening was cultured through his mother. I think knowing what to do and when to do it became second-nature. He was a good gardener, puttering over his garden, watching it day by day, providing a little fertilizer here or a stake there. KW