So, yes, there are bananas from Ecuador at all of the markets here, and much of the beef comes from Brazil. But this is also the land of plenty when it comes to local foods. When my new friend Anna and I were walking with our little ones around the Bass Garden here at the American Academy the other day, we just kept saying, “wow, isn’t this paradise?” Here’s a sampling of what we saw—in this over-the-top edible yard (and this is after much of the summer vegetable garden has been tilled under).
One last lonely cherry tomato:
Plum trees so heavy with clusters, the fruit is dropping to the ground:
Olive trees dripping with thousands of olives:
Fig trees, not with fruit this late, but still with a beautiful canopy:
Grapes:
Also growing in plentiful patches here are hot peppers, sage, and persimmons.
Anna and I, along with Lulu and Jack (4) and Jesse (2), took a leisurely tour of the garden, stopping to admire and sample all of the fruit, and to take a drink from the gurgling fountain:
Jack and Lulu also floated things down the irrigation canal—something of a mini Roman aqueduct for their world of miniature boats and barges:
The water flows into a basin with a drain and a spigot. To turn on the water at this end, you twist the little quail pictured above.
Our tour concluded when we saw a thunderhead approaching, above the umbrella pines:
This post is just an appreciation of beauty…. Soon, though, I’d like to address some questions—hinted at above—that I’ve been looking into about what local eating means in Rome, about pesticides and organics in Italy, and about farm sizes and types. Stay tuned.
The photos on Back to the Garden are just soooo rich! It does look like a paradise, and all on that small parcel of land that is the Academy??? We love the photos of Jack especially, who wouldn’t? I am looking forward to your posts on farms, the compare and contrast with Italia & Vermont! What can we learn from them??
amore e bacios, Mom