Get Growing
Craig Sailor is the Arts & Entertainment editor at The News Tribune. Last year he planted his first vegetable garden. Focusing on unusual varieties, “Freak of Nature” returns for 2008 with a new crop of uncommon vegetables and flowers. This year he’ll try yin yang beans, giant pumpkins, blue poppies and mutant sunflowers. He gardens at his North End Tacoma home and sneaks seeds in to his mother’s garden at Willapa Bay when she’s not looking. E-mail him at craig.sailor@thenewstribune.com.

Sue Kidd is the Lifestyle Editor at The News Tribune and the ringleader for the Home&Garden section. She is a decent vegetable gardener, but occasionally a tragic mess at growing other stuff. She’ll blog about gardening events, gadgets, her weird obsession with guerrilla gardening and all her assorted garden disasters. E-mail her with thoughts/rants/questions/bizarre observations. sue.kidd@thenewstribune.com.

More gardening blogs:
Greengirl
"Starting seeds, dreading weeds."

You Grow Girl
"Gardening for the people."

Between Plow and Wood
"Meditations on farming, nature, food, art, sustainability, the environment and rural living."

Downtown Tomatoes
"A gardening club for the rest of us."

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A Gardening Blog
Friday, April 25th, 2008
Posted by Sue Kidd @ 05:04:41 pm

Craig and I spent Thursday afternoon eating lunch and wandering around the Olympia Farmers Market. It was pretty cold and our lunches blew off our picnic table, but we somehow managed to get back to the newsroom without frostbite. Man, it was a brrrrr kind of cold.

Wandering around the market, we noticed how many plant vendors were there, although there would have been even more, we're guessing, if the weather would start showing some springlike tendencies (ugh).

One of our longest stops was at the Lynch Creek Farm booth to admire/gush/drool over the wide selection of dahlia tubers.

The next stop was to admire the lavender -- about a dozen different varieties -- at the Spring Creek Farm booth. Craig bought a few different culinary herbs, including sorrel, thyme, oregano, cilantro and bergamot.

I'm planning on heading back to the market this weekend before I head to the fun and kitschy Hazard Factory event. On my list of stuff to buy is a sweet bay tree from the Spring Creek Farm booth. It will be a nice vertical addition to my corner garden.

Categories: Field trip!