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Carl H. Klaus - Weathering Winter: A Gardeners Daybook (Bur Oak Original)

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NEW IN PAPER! Coming in September 2003 In winter, when the only things growing seem to be icicles and irritability, what pleasures exist for a gardener or for anyone who lives in a northern climate? In his distinctive daybook, Weathering Winter, Carl Klaus reminds readers that the season of brown twigs and icy gales is just as much a part of the year as when tulips open, tomatoes thrive, and pumpkins color the brown earth. From the first cold snap of late December 1994 to the first outdoor planting of onion sets and radish seeds in mid-March 1995, Klaus kept track of snow falling, birds flocking, soups simmering, gardening catalogs arriving, buds swelling, and seed trays coming to life. Gardeners, lovers of the out-of-doors, and weather watchers will recognize themselves in the ways in which Klaus has come to terms with the harsh climate and chilly truths that winter embodies. His constant, careful checks on the temperature and on the geraniums overwintering in the attic, his contentment in the basil- and garlic-flavored tomato sauce he cooked up from last seasons crops, and his walks with his wife in the bitter chill of starry January nights reflect the pull between indoors and out, the contrast between the beauty and the cruelty of the season.

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title Weathering Winter A Gardeners Daybook Bur Oak Original author - photo 1

title:Weathering Winter : A Gardener's Daybook Bur Oak Original
author:Klaus, Carl H.
publisher:University of Iowa Press
isbn10 | asin:0877455945
print isbn13:9780877455943
ebook isbn13:9781587291265
language:English
subjectVegetable gardening--Iowa--Iowa City--Anecdotes, Gardeners--Iowa--Iowa City--Anecdotes, Winter--Iowa--Iowa City--Anecdotes, Klaus, Carl H.--Diaries.
publication date:1997
lcc:SB320.7.I8K586 1997eb
ddc:635
subject:Vegetable gardening--Iowa--Iowa City--Anecdotes, Gardeners--Iowa--Iowa City--Anecdotes, Winter--Iowa--Iowa City--Anecdotes, Klaus, Carl H.--Diaries.
Page i
Weathering Winter
A Bur Oak Original Page ii Weathering Winter A Gardeners - photo 2
A Bur Oak Original
Page ii
Weathering Winter
A Gardener's Daybook
by Carl H. Klaus
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA PRESS Iowa City Page iv - photo 3
Picture 4
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA PRESS Iowa City
Page iv
University of Iowa Press, Iowa City 52242
Copyright (c) 1997 by the University of Iowa Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
Design by Richard Hendel
http: www.uiowa.edu/~uipress
No part of this book may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Printed on acid-free paper
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Klaus, Carl H.
Weathering winter: a gardener's daybook / by Carl H. Klaus.
p. cm.-(A Bur oak original)
ISBN 0-87745-594-5 (cloth)
1. Vegetable gardening-Iowa-Iowa City-Anecdotes.
2. Gardeners-Iowa-Iowa City-Anecdotes. 3. Winter
Iowa-Iowa City-Anecdotes. 4. Klaus, Carl H.-Diaries.
I. Title. II. Series.
SB320.7.18K586 1997
635-dc21 97-5720
97 98 99 00 01 02 c 5 4 3 2 1
A portion of this work (February 1-February 15) was first published in the Kansas Quarterly/Arkansas Review 28, no. 2.
Illustrations by Claudia McGehee
Page v
TO JOHN C. GERBER
Mentor for All Seasons
Page vii
Picture 5
One must have a mind of winter ...
Wallace Stevens, "The Snow Man"
Picture 6
When winter comes heaven will rain success on you.
Fortune cookie
Page ix
Contents
Acknowledgments
xi
Winter: An Introduction
xiii
Weathering Winter
1
Summer Postscript
181

Page xi
Acknowledgements
I'm grateful to the University of Iowa for a research leave that gave me time to envision this journal and begin turning my days into a winter daybook. During the chilling months of January, February, and early March, I was warmed by the encouragement of several people who took the time to read a few weeks or an early draft of the entire season. For their thoughtful reactions, I'm grateful to Connie Brothers, Bill Bulger, Rebecca Childers, David Hamilton, Diane Horton, and Mary Swander. My special thanks to Paul Diehl, Trudy Dittmar, Charles Drum, Mary Hussmann, Dan Roche, and Jan Weissmiller for their detailed reactions to a later draft of the journal; also to the students in my graduate journal-writing course for their frank discussion of its wintry themes-Valicia Boudry, Ellen Fagg, Vanessa Jones, Dorian Karchmar, Marilyn Knight, Patricia McKinley, Judith Mitchell, Angela Morales, Shanti Roundtree, Mitra Sedehi, and Elizabeth Tsukahara.
Most of all, I am indebted to Kate Franks for keeping me accurate and in touch with the special truths of winter.
Page xiii
Winter / An Introduction
Winter. Beloved of cross-country skiers, downhill racers, ice skaters, snowballers, snowmen, and snowplow manufacturers. Also beloved of folks who live in Tampa, San Diego, Honolulu, and other tropical spots where arctic weather advisories are never heard, except as good news for the tourist trade. But for most people who live in the temperate zone, winter is a time of plummeting temperatures, soaring heat bills, freezing rain, stalled cars, frozen pipes, and frigid ground. The season from hell, where beneath the fires in Dante's inferno, lies the ninth circle, the lowest level, the place of eternally freezing cold. No wonder so many people have moved from the Snowbelt deep into the Sunbelt, where the ground never freezes and the year never dies. Where the gardening season and the homegrown vegetables never end. I too have thought from time to time about making the move, especially when I've been walking the four-mile stretch of beach along Hanelei Bay on the north shore of Kauai in late December or early January. The sand under my feet, the sun on my cheek, Kate by my side, and the mild Pacific air all around me in a warm embrace. I've even
Page xiv
gone so far as to thumb through real estate ads for beachfront homes along that fabled bay, where
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