(Music: I'VE JUST SEEN A FACE, Lennon-McCartney) (info./disclaimers [0]) (glossary [0]) (index [0]) (gardening guide [0])
I can't forget the plants I've lost
Because I didn't keep them decently
Protected -- I mean essentially
They died
Died, died, died, die-die-died
They would have looked the other way
At 35 F they wouldn't have frozen
But those clear night skies they
caught 'em dozin'
They died
Died, died, died, die-die-died
And I feel maudlin
Remembering when
Peppers, eggplants, potatoes
Corn and beans, and basil too
Live or die depending what you do
At night
Night, night, night, nigh-nigh-night
And I feel maudlin
Remembering when
Fallin', temperature's fallin'
And I feel maudlin
Remembering when
From 32 to 38
They can die of cold or can look
just great
If covered with Reemay or a sheet
Or sprinkled overhead, they may
still taste sweet
The next day
Day, day, day, day-day-day
Cell walls are explodin'
With the cold
Or we'll be eatin'
Mush and mold
And I feel maudlin
Remembering when
Radiation frosts -- frosts which
occur under clear night skies at air temperatures above freezing -- are
legendary among gardeners, and are thought to occur most frequently around the
time of a full moon.
Excerpted from The Beetless' Gardening Book: An Organic Gardening Songbook/Guidebook, copyright 1997 by Chris Roth (info./disclaimers [0]) (glossary [0]) (index [0]) (gardening guide [0])