ABOUT | TOPICS |
Search  Hint
| My Free Newsletter
| rssrssfacebooktwitter

doodle by andre: promises, promises

gardening_agreementJUST A YEAR AFTER HE PROMISED TO LOVE AND HONOR Mrs. Andre forevermore, now Andre the doodler is making another marital contract of sorts, and apparently for good reason:

“This year I took charge of the gardening: the planting, the pruning, the growing of tomatoes,” Andre Jordan wrote to me in the email that contained this jpg. “Unfortunately, I didn’t do a very good job–the side of our garden was overtaken by weeds and all but a few of the plants died and the tomatoes did not work out. We spent last weekend undoing my ‘catastrophe’ and have decide to just start again next year–hence the ‘Gardening Agreement’ doodle. Ha.”

All I can say is, at least he’s still laughing (and I have it on good authority that she is, too).

Oh, and this: Happy anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Andre, and a lifetime more. It’s today (and here’s the wedding photo to prove it).

We A Way to Garden-ers love you both, and appreciate all the smiles you let us have with all-in-good-fun tales that pretend to be your own (or sometimes are–despite the two blank spaces where the names belong in the doodle above). Doodles on marital topics like these:

May continued blessings and every happiness–and maybe a garden that survives, including a ripe tomato?–come your way.

Comments

  1. Johanna says:

    Happy Anniversary, Mr. & Mrs. Andre! I am so happy to celebrate with you! Your kindness in showing a little love to a rescued pitbull on your happy day is most touching — sharing the love in one place where it is very much needed.

    And just remember, Andre, you’re not truly a gardener until you have a big failure. No risk, no reward!

  2. andre says:

    We love you too Margaret. x

    This morning I sat with Pickle (our pit bull) in our ‘catastrophic garden’ and smiled as she ran in circles and joyously rolled in the parts where the weeds once were.

  3. Susan says:

    Happy 1st year. Wishing you, Mrs. & Pickle lots of happiness. It was a great year for weed with me as well. Not to worry, just try again.

  4. Brian G. says:

    Great wedding photo. Pink pumps and red cons. A match made in heaven.

  5. Tammy says:

    Happpy Anniversary Mr. & Mrs. Andre!! Love the photo! I just wish I could get my husband to sign a contract that would only allow him to Look but not Touch the garden. There have been incidents. ex. Pulling up the bluebonnets he thought were weeds. :)

  6. Fred from Loudonville, NY says:

    ANDRE, by coming up with your Gardening Agreement, I think you have joined the ranks of the ALL American Men! After you are done mowing the lawn, YOU can POP a BREWski, take your shoes off, put your feet up, and watch a game, movie, take a nap, or think about the next cartoon for AWTG. WHILE doing that, the Misses can dig, weed, plant, prune, and all the OTHER chores that go with gardening, to keep the land around YOUR CASTLE looking good. WAY to GO GUY!!! Women, when you think an agreement like this is romantic, THINK TWICE. He probably did a poor job, so YOU would not look for him to continue. As with ALL contracts, CHECK the FINE PRINT!!!!!!!!

  7. Jo Ann says:

    Lol…you are so right this is the basic marital contract for gardening with your spouse don’t forget to add under mowing the lifting of all heavy objects and the maintaining of said gardening equipment such as sharpening the pruners.

    In my DH’s case a clause had to be added for the mowing part… that he shall not mow over anything that is not lawn related. He mowed over my Elephant Ears not just once but twice claims he didn’t see them “how could you not see them I asked? Look at the size of the leaves!” Apparently mowing can cause blindness in some men.

    Happy Anniversary.

  8. Steve says:

    Are you bonkers, Andre?

    Surely the real satisfaction of gardening is in the
    plants & planting, ceaseless design pondering & revising,
    fertility/moisture/light-shade adjustments, etc

    Mowing is the grunt work necessary to sustain the rest–all the rest is gravy.

  9. Margaret says:

    Welcome, Steve. Andre and I both pride ourselves on a bit of craziness, yes. It’s our most endearing quality, actually. :) I do think he got the short end of the stick, but marriage can be about compromise. See you soon!

  10. chigal says:

    She must not ever leave town. I’d have to add an clause at the end about exceptions in the case of absence during hot, end of summer weather. They say you should stress tomatoes (they call it topping and cutting back on water, I call it stress) to encourage them to hurry up and ripen. I guess my absence was well timed, ’cause they’re dying!!

Speak Your Mind

*

Tell Me You Like It!


get the away to garden newsletter

The Confessional

Some stuff really gets A Way to Garden-ers going. Weigh in, or just lurk while everyone else shares about these hot buttons:
resources

Juicy Bits

name that weed I KNOW A LOT OF PLANTS by their proper names, but my “weeds,” not so much. These great weed-identification websites are helping me finally address them with the proper (dis)respect.

everything old is new VINTAGE 'GREEN' POSTERS from the WPA 1940s look fresher than ever.

shrubs to covet THE OLDER THE GARDEN and I get, the more we love these shrubs.

plants that perform 21 POWERHOUSE PERENNIALS you will love for your garden.

herb-garden help GROWING AND STORING a year of parsley.

berry peachy-keen CLAFOUTIS BATTER how-to (the solution for easy fruit desserts).

rex, rhizomatous and more FANCY-LEAF BEGONIAS, beauties for indoors and out.

crispy refrigerator pickles WHAT IS IT ABOUT refrigerator pickles that makes everybody so happy? Get those cukes ready!

winged victory THE GARDEN as bird habitat: 11 tips on what birds like.

forum

keeping deer out DEER FENCE: I tried every anti-deer potion and trick till I got real and fenced. Strategies for every garden.

secrets to great tomatoes TOMATO TIPS, seed to harvest: Dozens of tricks for a better crop.

yes, even in dry shade MY 4 TOUGHEST GROUNDCOVERS perform even in the worst spots, like dry shade.

5 great small trees GARDEN-SIZED TREES can’t just be the right scale; they need to have multi-season interest, too. Have room for one of my favorites?

10 underplanting do’s and don’ts MAKING MOSAICS—that’s what I call good underplanting of trees and shrubs with a tapestry of plants. Here’s how.

making a 365-day garden THINK FALL (YES, FALL): Don’t get sucked in by spring-bloomers only at the nursery. A great garden happens 365 days: Shop smart to make it so.

the facts about bulbs SOMETHING UP with a flower bulb? Paltry bloom, or wondering when to feed or cut off the foliage? It’s all here.

must-read garden poem MY FAVORITE POEM celebrates loss, one of gardening (and life’s) realities. It does it with humor: "Why Did My Plant Die?” is a must-read. orchid rebloom made easy I REBLOOMED MY FIRST ORCHID recently (finally!) and it turns out to be pretty easy going. Here’s how.

can-do pruning REPEAT AFTER ME: I can prune. I can prune. If you follow this simple method for starters, your woody plants will thank you.

ourlittlegeekling urbanmixradio jonorte marriageleap stacietatum hagecreative mediawhizs crosbyandtaylor matoaz litquake megustalavida loquedeverdadmegusta thebignewsnowmagazine moremagazineoftheworldnow tvsandcine tuinformaciontecnologica miblogdecamiones staceylawliss marilynmoll dabullztemp