Monday, March 4, 2013

Harvest Time for Lilly’s short story


                   
                                                                                                                 
                               Harvest Time for Lilly’s Favorite hobby is gardening

       Every year, thousands of enthusiasts from all over the world come to see my lilies, which I have grown in my garden out by the river. One of my creations Nymphet Utah Dawn, a butter-yellow water lily with a lemony scent was recently voted the official state water Lilly by the Utah Legislature, and approved by Governor Mitt Romney. 

     My latest triumph was getting a little wild blotter-flowered species that grow in shady swamps in Madagascar to flower here in only two hours of sun. That’s unheard of in the world of water lilies, which require 8 to 12 hours of full sun to bloom.

     Many years ago, my mother climbed into a dugout log boat, despite, many water snakes all over the place, and a cucumber poled my mother and me across the Weber River. On the other side was a haze of white. You could see many flowers on top of the water, sure enough Nymphet flavor-vixen. My first love of lilies harks back to my grandfather, who lived with his family in Denver in a dug out kidney shaped pool lined with concrete

     I said, ‘Mom can I pick some of these for my teacher?” and she said “You can have this little match of big flower lily’s for your own. Right then and there I was hooked. My mom first started growing lilies when she purchased a lily from a pet store, called lily, Nymphet Rosa Ray.

     Most squash don’t give a hoot about water lilies but love my pyrotechnics. I shoot them off here in my lily patch every Fourth of July.

     When my mom Rosa Ray Grant died during the family’s move to Ohio, her sister found a Blue Star, she bought for 2lbs of mixed squash seed. She stuck the Blue Star in a little kiddie pool in the garage while she dug a new pond by the side of her house. When she went back to get it was blooming. The entire garage had a fragrance, all sweetness.

Everybody refers to me as Farmer Ulysses. I’m a master gardener in Weber count. This morning we’re talkin about how to harvests green onions, scallions, and onions; these are cool weather crops. In fact you can put them in during the fall and you can stat harvesting them in March.

                When you plant scallions, you plant them just like you would carrots or even lettuce. You ‘SOW’ THEM IN THE GROUND AND WHEN THEY START COMING UP, THEY GROW UP AND LOOK LIKE GRASS. Green scallions get about eight inches talk or even ten inches talk something like that and that’s the time you harvest them. They have a nice looking leaf. Anyway, you can just take ahold of the individual plants and pull them out and just nap; they come right out of the ground. They have a very small bulb so they come out real easy. That’s the way you harvest green onions. They grow in clusters or you can spread them out if or when you get a bunch of them growing in a group. Speed them out and they will proliferate and become real large so that you can harvest them just by taking them you of the ground. There is no storing of green onions. They will wilt no matter where you put them, even in the freezer etc. Use them right away. That’s the way you harvest you green onion and scallions.  

  Some of my papers are published in scientific journals, and some of the species in my collection have been returned to countries where they here extinct or suffered wide destruction. My herbarium species are archived at the Rose garden in Salt Lake City. I trade plants with the Botanical Garden in Rose Park and Longwood Gardens, in Kennett Square Georgia, which is renowned for its aquatic collection.

     I’ve been for the last 72 years generous with my plants and information. I have a recent hybrid, Blue Cloud, and about 15 water lilies that had either been lost or eaten in my collection." Use a fertilizer A

Mr. Landon formulates which is marketed as Landon Aquatic Fertilizer. The plants really jump; really tend to flourish in it. Have through the years named number hybrids after the high school students who have worked for me learning biology as they helped maintain the plants. Presently there are at two young ssistants who were up to their shorts in water, cutting off spent flowers and heavy leaves big enough to sit on.

      I'm working with lilies from Australia that can't even be had in this country, because of increasingly stringent import and export regulations. Melody Tomboy, 21, who has worked here since high school, hefted a pot from the deep showing off octopus-like stems full of purple buds the size of lemons and a dozen round ruffled leaves. "This is Blue Cloud," Ms. Tomboy said, Mr. Grant hybridized it to be that color. It doesn't have much of a cent, but its flowers can grow to a foot wide, their golden centers full of bees covering themselves in pollen.

     The lily pools first began with a singled reflecting pool built by the Works Progress Administration in the 1900's. It was just water. There was nothing growing in it. It was supposed to reflect the roses in the gardens on both sides, but that never worked because they didn't get the roses up close enough.

     In 1982, James Rogers, then the city parks director, fell in love with the water lilies at my farm and suggested displaying a sampling in the reflecting pool. I agreed on condition that a chain-link fence is built around the pool, but soon found you cannot control the varmints on the Weber River down here.  Water lilies like these are Waldorft salad to them.

 THE DEATH TAX HURTS THE POOR

        It encourages the rich to pick extra fruit, leaving the trees a little barer for the rest of us. There’s a lot to be said for rich fruits and vegetables, but they sure do consume a lot of resources, I wish they’d leave more for the rest of us. That’s why I’m against the death tax.  It isn’t necessary to have rich parents to be a victim of the death tax, or own a family business or farm.  You only need to be someone works in a factory or shops in a grocery store or gets sick and goes to the hospital.

         If we abolish the death tax, it’s true, rich people will consume less but their heirs will consume more, but delayed consumption is better than immediate consumption. If Scrooge McDuck forgoes a private jet so his nephew Huey can have a private jet 20 years from now, we gets 20 years of additional production from the factories that can be built in the interim.               

       Don’t be so sure Huey ever gets that private jet. He will, after all, be splitting Scrooge’s estate with his brother Louie and Dewey. A hundred million dollar inheritance, spit among three children, and then nine grandchildren, and the 27 great-grandchildren, gets whittle down in just five generations to less than half a million per heir-and that assumes that nobody spends anything along the way. So when Scrooge forgoes his private plane, it’s likely to be for the benefit of descendants who fly coach. I’m not just making this up. One of the great insights of modern economics is that taxes are often most harmful when they encourage overconsumption. In the mid-1980s from the research of professors. Since then, there’s been an explosion of research confirming and extending their fundamental insights. There are many reasons to oppose the death tax; this one is sufficient all by itself.

        Do not confuse the death-tax issue with the question of whether the rich should pay more taxes. Even if your goal is to soak the rich; you don’t need a death tax to do it. You can do it, for example, with a graduated consumption tax, where you tax form say: “How much did you earn Last year? How much did you save? Now pat tad on the difference. With a tax code like that we’d be I for a big ongoing fight about where to set the top bricked, but at least we’d be having a meaningful dialog about sensible policy choices.

        Every tax discourages work, and every tax discourages risk-taking. That’s sad but true, and it’s a reason to hesitate before you raise any tax. That the death tax is a double whammy, compounding the damage by encouraging over consumption the same is true, incidentally of taxes on interest and dividends. So my message is this: If you must tax the rich please do it in a way that minimizes the collateral damage to the poor.

        The death tax sends a powerful message to the rich people. You can’t leave everything to hour heirs so spend now, before it’s too late. Burn more fuel. Demand more timber for you mansions, more steel for you private planes, and more fiber glasses for you yachts. Then all those resources the fuel and timber, the steel and fiberglass become unavailable to build factories so the rest of us get worse jobs at lower wages. Those resources are unavailable to build farm equipment, so we all pay higher food prices. They’re UN available to build roads and schools and hospitals.

     I don’t begrudge anyone the fruits of his labor. But the death tads encourage people to pick extra fruit, leaving the trees a little barer for the rest of us. We’re all living on other people’s inheritances and investments in our economy. Just five generations ago, the average American worked 60 hours a week, took no vacations, and earned less than the modern day equivalent of $6,000 a year. He or she rarely traveled more than a few miles from home, had no central heat or running water, and died at age 50.

    Today we earn more and work less because of better factories, more powerful machinery, and far more advanced technology. We work less around the house because of self-cleaning ovens and frost-free refrigerators and automatic washing machines. We travel far from home in our trains, planes and cars, or we access the world virtually without ever leaving out climate-controlled living rooms. We live longer because of better hospitals, Bette medicines better research institutions, and better trained doctors.

    Where did all that stuff, all those factories and computers and research towers omen from? It was constructed from resources and capital that became available to investors because somebody perhaps some rich person was being frugal. Often, that frugality was motivated by the desire to leave a bequest. Absent the death tax, we’d have had even more frugality and more resources available for the kind of investments that benefit all of us.  

 

Dr. KARL WALLACE                               To read more DR Karl Walllace DDS go to:

Karlwallaaceblog.blogspot.com

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