Gardening at the Dragon\'s Gate is fundamental Work that permeates your entire life.
This is her first book..
Her column, "On Gardening," has appeared in Tricycle The Buddhist Review for more than ten years.
A Buddhist meditation teacher who is deeply engaged in environmental Work nationally, she is an advis Er to the Edible Schoolyard program of the Chez Panisse Foundation and has helped to establish many garden programs in public schools and local communities throughout the Bay Area.
About the Author: Wendy Johnson is one of the founders of the organic Farm and Garden Program at Green Gulch Farm Zen Center in Marin County and now lives with her family in nearby Muir Beach.
But she is also a lover of the untamed and weedy, and she evokes through her exquisite prose an abiding appreciation for the earth--both Cultivated and forever wild--in a book sure to earn a place in the great tradition of American nature writing.
Johnson is a hands-on, on-her-knees gardener, and she shares with the reader a wealth of practical knowledge and fascinating garden lore.
Now Johnson has distilled her lifetime of experience into this extraordinary celebration of inner and outer growth, showing how the garden cultivates the gardener even as she digs beds, heaps up compost, plants flowers and fruit trees, and harvests bushels of organic vegetables.
Renowned for its pioneering role in California\'s food revolution, Green Gulch provides choice produce to farmers\' markets and to San Francisco\'s Greens restaurant.
For more than thirty years, Wendy Johnson has been meditating and Gardening at the Green Gulch Farm Zen Center in northern California, where the fields curve like an enormous green dragon between the hills and the ocean.
It demands your energy and heart, and it gives you back great treasures as well, like a fortified sense of humor, an appreciation for paradox, and a huge harvest of Dinosaur kale and tiny red potatoes.
Gardening at the Dragon\'s Gate is fundamental Work that permeates your entire life