The Garden That Started Everything
Grandma Margaret always said her love of gardening began with a single tomato plant she grew from seed when she was ten years old. Her father, a dairy farmer in Middlebury, gave her a small patch of earth behind the barn and told her it was hers to do with whatever she liked.
She planted that tomato, watered it every morning before school, and kept a little notebook where she tracked its progress in the careful handwriting of a child who took her responsibilities seriously. When it finally produced its first red tomato in August, she carried it inside, sliced it at the kitchen table, and served it to her family with a sprinkle of salt. She remembered her father saying it was the best tomato he'd ever tasted.
"He probably said that to every tomato I ever grew," she'd tell us, laughing. "But I believed him every single time."
Prompted by: "What's your earliest memory of something you created or made with your hands?"