growing things
A LITTLE
BIT OF MAGIC For greater success in our area’s short growing season, consider renting a garden plot BY LISA NYREN PHOTOGRAPHY BY SUSAN LYKES
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TETON HOME and living Spring/Summer 2010
J
udy Allen and her mother planted a lollipop tree in their yard in Illinois after they had watched an episode of Captain Kangaroo in which the beloved children’s TV-show host did just that. The next day, they found a large tree made of many branches where the single lollipop stick had been planted; on it were growing dozens of lollipops. What kid wouldn’t love that? Now settled in Teton Valley with a family of her own, Allen planted a lollipop tree with her son, Will, for several summers until, as she put it, Will was old enough that “the Scotch® tape was a dead giveaway!”
But Allen doesn’t need tape in her sprawling yard at the mouth of Darby Canyon; anyone can see the magic she sows. It is the magic of a forward-thinking gardener who selected a piece of real estate with finicky precision, the magic of more than a decade of tending the soil, now so rich with nutrients and plant-loving creatures that chemical fertilizer is unnecessary and would be drastically out of place. A favorable microclimate—where geography and weather patterns combine to support cultivation of a green thumb—provides more magic. And Allen is kind enough to share it all with fellow Teton Valley gardeners. Some are experienced, but many just want a good place to begin. In 2008, on a single acre of the family’s fifteen-acre property, Allen began renting garden plots, each just fifty square feet in size. She shares her soil (which meets national certified organic standards), her irrigation system, and, perhaps most importantly,