Saturday, July 11, 2020

Gardening during a pandemic

Elvie Bongosia's caladium.

Going to the grocery stores and markets to find pots and planters feels like an act of desperation already during this time. Aside from braving the masked lines, flower pots and planters are becoming rare to find.

 

Why? People are turning to gardening as a soothing and family-friendly hobby.  Fruit and vegetable seed sales are skyrocketing.

 

People are also looking for activities to spend their free time. Parents, too, are turning to gardening as an outdoor activity to do together with children stuck at home after schools shut.

 

Helen Castano passed along some vegetable seeds and my initial burst of excitement has turned into dread.

 

Since it was ages ago that I last did gardening in my elementary school, I asked Helen for tips on how to make my garden grow.

 

 "Simple," she said. “Water them every day, put them out in the sun, and talk to them.”

 

 Helen has snake plants and cactus to complement her garden. She said gardeners without yards of soil can plant vegetables and flowers in trash bags, she said.

 

She said "now is a wonderful time to be a home gardener, because you’re home and have time."

 

Elvie C. Bongosia of the Philippine Information Agency (PIA) - Bohol, a green thumb and advocate of plants, has a pretty all-pink caladium collection.

 

 "You are beautiful no matter what shape you are," she said of her succulent plants.

 

 Maria Fe H. Evasco turns her place into "plantastic."

 

For Miss Tagbilaran 1987 Fiel Angeli E. Araoarao-Gabin, there’s a reason why so many people own indoor plants these days.

 

Fiel Angeli Araoarao-Gabin's coral cactus plant and the water lily painting from visual artist Joey Labrador are a perfect match in the dining room.

Not only do they bring color and beauty to an area, but studies have proven that these ornamental plants instantly improve a person’s physical and mental well-being.

 

 "They are effectively purifying the air and reducing stress through their calming presence," she said.

 

Her indoor plant collection, mostly snake plant varities, are gifts from her friends.

 

"I always believe that there is beauty in simplicity," she said. Her coral cactus plant and the water lily painting from visual artist Joey Labrador are a perfect match in the dining room.

 

Fiel emphasized that simple plants will do, since "gardening is not about expensive plants and pricey pots".

 

On the other hand, Fiel's hubby, Jerome John from Siquijor, is so much into edible urban landscaping everyday, before and after office work.

 

He has "law-oy" corner with Kamunggay (Moringa), Tanglad (Lemongrass), Kangkong, Camote Tops, Alugbati (Spinach) and Sibuyas (Spring Onions).

 

Moreover "Balay Kabilin" is not just a place to enrich our minds, but also to scout for some plants. When we visited Prof. Marianito Jose M. Luspo last week, he was planting some onions on the vacant lot. The "Balay Kabilin" has kamunggay and ornamental plants, too.

 

When his friends visit him at "Balay Kabilin", Sir Luspo expects for the "Great Botanical Raid” to begin.

 

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