• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • How to Garden
    • Garden Pests
    • Plant Diseases
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Seed Starting
    • Tools & Equipment
  • Plants
    • Plant Profiles
    • Vegetables
    • Fruit
    • Herbs
  • Recipes
    • Canning and Food Preservation
  • Books & Classes
    • Books by Jeanne Grunert
    • Books for Christian Herbalists
    • Herbalism Classes
  • About
    • Privacy Policy

Old Fashioned Customs

August 4, 2010 by Jeanne

When I was growing up, my mother and grandmother always sent home grown vegetables with my dad to work or bouquets of flowers with us to bring to the teacher or up to church during the week. Home baked pies or cookies often accompanied someone to a meeting at school, work or church. Sharing was expected and many afternoons the doorbell would ring around 4 p.m. and Mrs. Allen, a dear friend of my parents and a former home economics teacher at the local high school, would be beaming at me from the porch, a piping hot apple pie in hand. This was what I grew up with and what I carried with me into adulthood.

Sometime in the last 10 years, however, the tenor changed whenever I’d bring something homemade or home grown into work. The first time I noticed this was at a certain job in Manhattan. I remember one of the editors poking at the tray of home made sugar cookies I’d put out in the break room and making a joke about me being a Martha Stewart wanna be. A few years later, I brought home made banana bread to another company. People made more than a little fun of it and I heard some snickers.  Someone actually told me to my face that I was weird. (Well, I am, but for bringing in snacks?)  That didn’t stop them from devouring it, by the way. And it did come out pretty good.

What’s changed? I’m not sure, but here in the countryside, people remain as generous with homemade, home grown and home baked things as always.

I walked into a local shop and the clerk had a big watermelon on the counter behind her.  That’s not at all what her shop sold so I commented on the gigantic behemoth.

“Oh that,” she smiled, “One of my customers brought it in for me. Isn’t it a doozy?”

Can you imagine bringing a home grown watermelon into the local dry cleaners on Long Island, Manhattan or another major city? They’d probably call the police and assume you’d spiked it with poison or something.

Here, they were planning to dig into it and invited me back later to partake of it!

Filed Under: Personal

Previous Post: « Waving the White Flag
Next Post: Even Mowing the Lawn Is an Adventure »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jessica

    August 6, 2010 at

    I think that’s one of the things I love about living in the south…. my boyfriend’s a bartender, and just the other day a regular cusomer brought him a bag of homegrown corn on the cob to bring home to me. Was great!

  2. Sue

    August 13, 2010 at

    I’m from the Midwest-and I’d consider my neighbors WEIRD if they weren’t sneaking boxes of zuchinnis onto my porch at all hours of the night. It’s rather funny how hokey people think it is to be neighborly. Poor them, they are missing out on a lot………

Footer

water droplets in sunbeams over a raised bed vegetable garden

Irrigation Tips for Home Gardens: Drip vs. Soaker Hose

Watering is one of the most essential tasks in maintaining a healthy home garden, yet it is also one of the most misunderstood. Many gardeners rely on overhead sprinklers or hand-watering, both of which can waste water and fail to deliver moisture efficiently to plant roots. Two of the most effective alternatives are drip irrigation…

Read More

chive plants in bloom with lettuce

The 10 Easiest Herbs to Grow

Grow them in pots, containers, window boxes, raised beds, or tucked among your flowers. These are the 10 easiest herbs to grow in almost any temperate garden. They take up little space, are generally unfussy, and are used in lots of recipes. What Do I Need to Start an Herb Garden? You don’t need a…

Read More

a blue borage herb flower

How to Start Herb Seeds the Right Way: Free Course

Learn how to start herb seeds the right way with The Herbal Academy’s new, FREE online course! Home Garden Joy is an Herbal Academy affiliate. We love their ebooks and courses. I’ve taken many of them and found them to be very helpful. They get to the heart of herbalism without introducing spiritual aspects in…

Read More

raised bed garden

How to Prepare Raised Beds for Spring Planting

The snow and ice have finally melted. In the mornings when I walk my dog through our farm, I can hear a rooster crowing on a neighboring farm. Cardinals have begun singing in the dawn. It’s spring, folks. And while the calendar reminds me we can still feel winter’s icy breath, spring planting is just…

Read More

  • About
  • Plant a Row for the Hungry
  • Awards
  • Privacy Policy

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2026 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme