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Homefront: An Annual Dose of Dirt

May 29, 2014 | By Seabee Magazine
By Lisa Smith Molinari
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VIRIN: 140529-N-ZZ182-6344
I ve got dirt under my fingernails. There's a blister the size of Delaware on my thumb. My face is sunburned in a distinctive raccoon pattern around my sunglasses. I m walking with a slight limp, thanks to the pain in my knee from too much squatting. This happens to me every spring. As the bees begin to buzz, I get the bug to plant things in my garden. The grocery stores display flats of pansies outside the entrances, the hardware stores offer specials on grass seed, and I find myself heaping my cart with annuals, perennials, shrubs, vegetables and herbs. We moved into base housing at Naval Station Newport, R.I., last July, too late to plant. So this spring, as soon as winter gave up its death grip on the soil, I was ready. I dropped a pretty penny at the local Garden Center, and informed my husband that we had to dig out the overgrown shrubs running along the driveway of our base house. We found our shovels that hadn t been unpacked since the last move, and went to work. We thought we d lever the root ball of each shrub out with a few scoops of the shovel, but of course the overgrown plants wouldn t budge. One inch under the topsoil was a complex tangle of woody roots and random rocky deposits, the removal of which could have warranted the use of combat-grade explosives. For an hour, we chopped, hacked, tugged and pulled, but still hadn t uprooted the first shrub, despite spewing every expletive in the book. We guzzled water between breathless attempts, as sweat soaked through our shirts. My husband began grunting and groaning with every heave of the shovel, like a middle-aged male version of Monica Seles. Finally, the last stubborn root broke free, and we triumphantly hurled the severed bush away. One down, only five more to go. Needless to say, the next day after we removed all six shrubs and two diseased rhododendrons, my husband and I could barely walk. It took me a week to recover enough energy to plant the new perennials I d purchased at the Garden Center, and my knee still feels like it s going to buckle like some kind of hyperextended Barbie Doll leg. This week, I finally managed to get everything in the ground, the pots and the window boxes. And although it doesn t exactly look like the recreation of Epcot that I d imagined, I ve satisfied my annual spring gardening fix. Thankfully, my horticultural urgings are more about the process than the end result. Every spring, I crave the catharsis of digging in the dirt, and long to revive my hibernating muscles with the rigors of yard work. I can smell the aroma of freshly mulched borders, see the hues of artistically arranged beds and taste the refreshment of a cold beer after a long day outdoors. I envision myself, in a flowered sundress and straw hat, walking through my abundant garden barefoot on a hot midsummer day, placing my own freshly cut flowers, aromatic herbs and plump vegetables into a basket. Come summer, it never quite turns out the way I d hoped, and I usually find myself totally dumbfounded when my tomatoes suffer from bottom rot and my azaleas have blight. My thumb might be blistered, but unfortunately it isn't green. But let s face it I can buy whatever I want at a grocery store. And besides, when it comes to the fulfillment of gardening I ve been paid back in spades.