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This weekend we got some more veggies planted and we’ve now got rhubarb, grapes, raspberries, strawberries, potatoes, corn, beets, runner beans, garlic, onion, tomato, lettuce, red and yellow peppers, dill, mint and lavender growing. I still want to get some spinach and some basil in, although we are quickly running out of room.

Right now most of the garden is planted with seedlings we bought, but the seeds we started in the house are trucking along and hopefully we can plant them outdoors soon too. We’ve been hardening off the seedlings on an almost daily basis and transplanted some into bigger containers this weekend. Below is a snapshot I took during the transplanting activities. I call it “Tomato and Basil sandwich in the Making.” :)

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We harvested a whack (that is the technical term!) of rhubarb on the weekend. The scent of rhubarb pie, rhubarb chutney and rhubarb sauce lingers in the air as I write this. Yum!

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And in other gardening news, I was delighted to hear that Gayla Trail (of You Grow Girl fame) will be a regular columnist in The Globe & Mail. This makes me want to renew my subscription to the paper!

I’m working on some long-overdue editing tasks today. I have been picking away at these files all week, but really want to get them wrapped up today or tomorrow. I finished one section, saved it and took a break. When I came back to work on the next section, Word was no longer allowing me to use the font I have been using for this project. It simply is not listed, and when I tried to copy and paste an already formatted section into the new section I got a message informing me that Helvetica was not installed on my computer. Somehow while I was downstairs making a sandwich this font got uninstalled from my laptop? How do things like this happen?

Perhaps this is a message from the universe that I should just shut my computer and go outside and play today.

I’ve recently been watching Simon Schama’s series, “The Power of Art.” Wow. Even though I am a huge fan of Schama’s work (Landscape and Memory remains one of my favourite books of all time), I have to admit that I was a little reluctant to give “The Power of Art” a chance. I knew Schama would do a good job of presenting the artists and artworks selected for the series, but I guess I felt a little uncomfortable with the selection of artists. They are all “dead white guys,” the canon revisited. “Haven’t these guys been given enough press?” was my initial response. Upon reflection I can see that was precisely the point — Schama is asking us to consider just why it is that these artists (Caravaggio, Bernini, Rembrandt, David, Turner, Van Gogh, Picasso and Rothko) have fascinated so many. Schama’s characteristic style coupled with some amazing cinematography (I can only imagine the size of the budget for these), makes for some pretty interesting viewing.

On a related note, Damien Hirst has had a good week. Hirst gets a lot of criticism for what he does, and may argue that what he does is not “art.” On a conceptual level I get his work, and I think his work brings a lot to debates regarding the meaning and function of art in contemporary society. However, what I simply can not accept is his continued exploitation of animal bodies. I guess if people are willing to pay millions of dollars for these pieces he has little incentive to stop.

Keri Cronin

I am an Assistant Professor in the Department of Visual Arts at Brock University, a campus located right in the heart of Canada’s Niagara region. In my research and teaching I explore various aspects of the relationships that exist between art, science, place and people, both in our contemporary culture and in times past. Some of the things I write about include: gardens, parks, toxic waste, porcelain dinner plates, bears and postcards. I'm a newbie gardener and look forward to growing more than dandelions in my new garden plots. I have been told numerous times that "you can grow anything" in Niagara and I am excited to put that theory to the test!

Click here for my Brock website. Click here for the course blog I have set up for my Intro to Visual Culture class. Click here for the course blog I have set up for my 19th Century Visual Culture Class. You will also find me posting over at Planetary, a blog dedicated to teaching Environmental Humanities.