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Planting Quotes

Quotes tagged as "planting" Showing 1-30 of 62
Michelle Obama
“We were planting seeds of change, the fruit of which we might never see. We had to be patient.”
Michelle Obama, Becoming

Vera Nazarian
“The master of the garden is the one who waters it, trims the branches, plants the seeds, and pulls the weeds. If you merely stroll through the garden, you are but an acolyte.”
Vera Nazarian, The Perpetual Calendar of Inspiration

E.A. Bucchianeri
“There's something satisfying about getting your hands in the soil.”
E.A. Bucchianeri, Vocation of a Gadfly

Jim Robbins
“Planting trees, I myself thought for a long time, was a feel-good thing, a nice but feeble response to our litany of modern-day environmental problems. In the last few years, though, as I have read many dozens of articles and books and interviewed scientists here and abroad, my thinking on the issue has changed. Planting trees may be the single most important ecotechnology that we have to put the broken pieces of our planet back together.”
Jim Robbins, The Man Who Planted Trees: Lost Groves, Champion Trees, and an Urgent Plan to Save the Planet

Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi
“It is not hard to start a small garden, all you need is a sapling, a planting pot, a small bag of soil, and regular watering. There you go, you helped cooling the earth down by one plant.”
Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi

Harley King
“Let go of your old tired habits and plant new habits in fertile soil.”
Harley King

Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi
“Big problems need big solutions. This season is the hottest Summer the humans live all over the world, and the question is, "What should we do to cool the earth down and retrieve our normal lives back?"
The only answer I have is to plant the earth; each centimeter on the planet should be planted again. Earth is our home, if we didn't take care of it and of all who lives on it, then who will?”
Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi

Joanne Harris
“In return, Joe taught Jay more about the garden. Slowly the boy learned to tell lavender from rosemary from hyssop from sage. He learned to taste soil- a pinch between the finger and thumb slipped under the tongue, like a man testing fine tobacco- to determine its acidity. He learned how to calm a headache with crushed lavender, or a stomachache with peppermint. He learned to prepare skullcap tea and chamomile to aid sleep. He learned to plant marigolds in the potato patch to discourage parasites and to pick nettles from the top to make ale and to fork the sign against the evil eye if ever a magpie flew past.”
Joanne Harris, Blackberry Wine

Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi
“Plant to breathe
Plant to cool down the earth
Plant to heal yourself, physically and mentally
Plant to regain balance
Plant to live”
Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi

Michael Bassey Johnson
“One good thing about the rain is that it is not only destructive, in that it can bring dead plants back to life.”
Michael Bassey Johnson, Night of a Thousand Thoughts

Maria Karvouni
“All humans are the same. It's pathetic when some denounce others for something the first also do. So mend your own business and stop intervening on others' business.”
Maria Karvouni

Sreya Bremtin
“the soil here is harsh
unwelcoming
and half the things
I love
do not grow.”
Sreya Bremtin, Moments at Midnight: A Poetry Collaboration

Abbi Waxman
“The cornstalks act as supports for the climbing beans, the beans fix nitrogen in the soil for the corn and squash, and the squash provides mulch and root protection for the corn and beans. And then, just to make it all perfect, when you eat the corn and beans together, they form a complete protein.”
Abbi Waxman, The Garden of Small Beginnings

Michael Bassey Johnson
“When you plant a tree, you bring nature a step closer to your home.”
Michael Bassey Johnson, Night of a Thousand Thoughts

Maria Karvouni
“Stop believing everything you're told. Even if it seems to be reliable. People are sly, and fool others for several reasons. Capable humans know exactly how to do that.”
Maria Karvouni

Nitya Prakash
“The next generation will never be able to understand the joy of planting a tree and watching it grow.”
Nitya Prakash

Romain Gary
“He thought of all that the newspapers were printing about him. Each man attributed to him his own hopes, his own motives and rancors, and his own secret misanthropy: it was in vain that he stated his own aims clearly; there was nothing he could do about it.
And yet the truth was clear; it could hardly be clearer.
He loved all those free roots that gave their beauty to the earth and to man’s life on it.
He loved nature, and he had always done his best to defend it.”
Romain Gary, The Roots of Heaven

Joanne Harris
“He always planted at a new moon and picked when the moon was full. He had a lunar chart in his greenhouse, each day marked in a dozen different inks; brown for potatoes, yellow for parsnips, orange for carrots. Watering too was done to an astrological schedule, as was the pruning and positioning of trees. And the garden thrived on this eccentric treatment, growing strong, luxuriant rows of cabbages and turnips, carrots which were sweet and succulent and mysteriously free of slugs, trees whose branches fairly touched the ground under the weight of apples, pears, plums, cherries. Brightly colored Oriental-looking signs taped to tree branches supposedly kept the birds from eating the fruit. Astrological symbols- painstakingly constructed from pieces of broken pottery and colored glass set into the gravel path- lined the garden beds.”
Joanne Harris, Blackberry Wine

Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi
“We can't stop the seasons' changing, but we can fix the Earth by replanting it. The world was created in perfect balance, but our wrong actions led to having freezing winters in some regions and burning hot summers in others.
This planet that God created was made perfectly; it only needs help to regain its original beautiful state.”
Noora Ahmed Alsuwaidi

Abbi Waxman
“Humans have been growing food for themselves since the dawn of time. Indeed, many plants have developed a dependance on us, just as some plants require digestion by birds to activate their seeds. We do our part by planting seeds in healthy soil, watering them, weeding them, and leaving them in peace. They return the favor by growing fruits and seeds and flowers that we like to eat.”
Abbi Waxman, The Garden of Small Beginnings

Mindy Friddle
“We walked to a row of three stones: our grandmother and grandfather and, between them, our mother. There were crocuses and daffodils and snowdrops blooming on my mother's grave. Gran had always carefully tended it. After Sunday dinners, when we were little, Gran would put on her wide-brimmed gardening hat and gloves and take along her basket of garden tools and bring us down here. She would plant lavender petunias and purple bearded irises. She would deadhead the spent daylilies and pull up weeds on my mother's grave and on my great-grandmother Beulah's grave back in the corner. She barely touched my grandfather's grave, scratched in some monkey grass and ivy and told us even that was too good for him.”
Mindy Friddle, The Garden Angel

Alexandra Monir
“Running my hands over the dirt, I suddenly feel an unfamiliar, electric charge buzzing through my fingertips. I jump back, hands trembling.
"Are you all right?" Sebastian asks, his green eyes glancing down at me with concern.
"Mm-hmm." I look away in embarrassment before returning to my task, gingerly spreading more dirt over the seeds. The buzzing shoots through my hands once again and my eyes squeeze shut in pain.
And then I hear Sebastian gasp. I open my eyes as Lucia shouts, "Where did her flower come from? Is this a trick?"
Bewildered, I glance in front of me---and stifle a scream.
A glorious Canterbury bell stands in full bloom, where moments ago there were only seeds. Its violet petals are damp from the water I just sprinkled over the dirt, and I gape at the impossible sight in disbelief.”
Alexandra Monir, Suspicion

“As a man thinketh, so is he?
The Faith of a mustard seed?
I planted those words in my thoughts
and still
my mind wound up lost
between my dreams and reality.”
N'Zuri Za Austin

“How much light do plants need?
As a loose guideline, low-light plants need 500-2,500 lux, medium-light plants 2,500-10,000 lux, bright light plants 10,000-20,000 lux, and very bright-light plants need about 20,000-50,000 lux.”
Oliver Heath, Design A Healthy Home: 100 ways to transform your space for physical and mental wellbeing

“Introduce hanging plants...
Bringing high planting into your home recreates what we would experience in a jungle or forest habitat.”
Oliver Heath, Design A Healthy Home: 100 ways to transform your space for physical and mental wellbeing

“Introduce tabletop plants...
Using potted plants is a great idea as they don't need to be replaced in the same way that flowers do.”
Oliver Heath, Design A Healthy Home: 100 ways to transform your space for physical and mental wellbeing

A.W. Tozer
“Paul’s sewing of tents was not equal to his writing of an Epistle to the Romans, but both were accepted of God and both were true acts of worship. Certainly it is more important to lead a soul to Christ than to plant a garden, but the planting of the garden can be as holy an act as the winning of a soul.”
A.W. Tozer, The Pursuit of God

Jessica Marie Baumgartner
“Planting trees and using them to communicate with the natural world is holy work.”
Jessica Marie Baumgartner, The Magic of Trees

Michael Bassey Johnson
“I love how the garden brightens after getting drenched by rain.”
Michael Bassey Johnson, Night of a Thousand Thoughts

“Human beings go on living as if they own the whole world. There are two misconceptions that humans hold, which constitute the major portion of all the wrongs that they do. First is that the Earth belongs to humans and the second is that humans belong to Earth.”
Shivanshu K. Srivastava

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