BEFORE:
AFTER
This little box was fun to make, and it's making me inordinately happy!
The results are in! This year we harvested 17.4 pounds of strawberries from our backyard! At a conservative $1.99/lb for fresh organic strawberries, that is $34.62 worth of strawberries. I have been freezing whatever doesn't get eaten right away, and hope to be adding garden-grown strawberries to my oatmeal for weeks. :)
Last years harvest was 13 pounds. This is all from 12 strawberry seedlings we bought in 2022 for $9.96.
Next up - planting runners in little yogurt dishes so that we can transplant them wherever we want. I'm hoping to keep refreshing the beds this way and never have to buy new strawberry seedlings again.
I will say that strawberries are fairly labor-intensive. During the peak of the season I've been known to spend two hours harvesting, coring, washing, weighing, blending, and freezing them. But so worth it!
In a recent study comparing every Nobel Prize-winning scientist from 1901 to 2005 with typical scientists of the same era, both groups attained deep expertise in their respective fields of study. But the Nobel Prize winners were dramatically more likely to be involved in the arts than the less accomplished scientists. Here’s what a team of fifteen researchers at Michigan State University found about engagement in the arts among Noble Prize winners relative to ordinary scientists:
If the scientist practiced music, he or she was twice as likely to win as compared to contemporaries
Arts such as drawing, painting, printmaking or sculpting - 7x as likely.
Crafts: Woodworking, mechanics, electronics, glassblowing - 7.5x as likely
Writing: poetry, plays, novels, short stories, essays, popular books - 12x as likely
Performing: acting, dancing, magician - 22x as likely