Glean Daily

Taking a closer look to find insights in unexpected places.

Impressionist painting of three peasant women in a field gathering unharvested stalks of wheat.
“The Gleaners” by Jean-François Millet (1857)

The ancient practice of gleaning provided a dignified alternative for individuals with no land or limited means to provide food for their families. In the Old Testament, the Israelites were commanded to look out for those who were less fortunate, “When you reap the harvest of your land, do not reap to the very edges of your field or gather the gleanings of your harvest. Do not go over your vineyard a second time or pick up the grapes that have fallen. Leave them for the poor and the foreigner.” (Leviticus 19:9-10)

Gleaning today generally refers to the gathering of bits of information in order to gain a better understanding of a complicated subject. I hope you will join me in this blog project as I share the insights I am gleaning by taking a closer look at the plants, animals and dirt in my backyard.

Latest Posts


  • About Bunnies and Boundaries

    All summer long, an adorable little bunny has been showing up in our backyard. She’s a stealthy animal, and I’ve never actually caught her eating any of my plants or vegetables, but the evidence of her voracious appetite is everywhere: flowers that suddenly disappear, baby citrus buds that mysteriously vanish; shrubs stripped bare overnight. Anytime… Continue reading

    About Bunnies and Boundaries
  • A Community that Gleans

    The blog “Glean Daily” emphasizes the dual meanings of “to glean” as both a method of gathering produce and knowledge. It highlights the importance of community gardens, like the Frenchtown iGrow garden in Tallahassee, which provide food to those in need and foster community connections. Personal experiences illustrate the rewards of gardening and learning through… Continue reading

    A Community that Gleans
  • A Tale of Two Sunflowers

    With visions of an eye-catching row of tall sunflowers towering over the fence in my backyard, I carefully placed the seeds I had harvested from last summer’s blooms in a row of dirt along the fence line. I watered the area regularly and looked forward to the spectacular wall of yellow petals I would soon… Continue reading

    A Tale of Two Sunflowers
  • Chickening Out

    As a general concept, raising chickens in our backyard seemed like a good idea. We had the space, the price of eggs was getting crazy expensive, we knew other people who were doing it… But lots of things can seem like good ideas when you only have a vague understanding of what it will actually… Continue reading

    Chickening Out
  • Compost is Context

    This past May, I bought a special oversized planter and dreamed of harvesting fresh squash from our backyard this summer. I filled the container with a blend of organic soil and carefully placed squash seedlings and a sprinkling of fertilizer into the perfectly balanced dirt. I watered those plants daily when we didn’t get rain… Continue reading

    Compost is Context
  • Reservoirs

    After a week of cycling in the cool and breezy weather of Nova Scotia, I was shocked when I came home to the brutal heat and humidity of a Tallahassee summer. Fortunately, my husband had kept our garden and yard well-watered while I was gone, so I didn’t find the death and destruction I feared… Continue reading

    Reservoirs
  • Squirt

    Last week my husband and I went to the local Tractor Supply store with our four grandchildren (ages 8, 9, 10, and 11) to let them each “adopt” a baby chick. It was the first day of a weeklong overnight summer camp we host for them every year and although we will be ultimate keepers… Continue reading

    Squirt
  • Squirrelly – and White!

    By Dr. Sissi Carroll Flat Rock, North Carolina, the village in Western North Carolina (WNC) where my husband, Joe, and I now live, is a destination town because it offers quick access to these, among other delights:  Our white squirrels, to many visitors’ surprise, are not albino. They are leucistic; in other words, they have… Continue reading

    Squirrelly – and White!
  • Becoming a Bean

    I wasn’t planning to grow beans this summer, but a few months ago, I went to a Tractor Supply Store for the first time in my life in search of advice on raising backyard chickens (a subject for a future blog post). The staff were super helpful and generously shared their professional and personal knowledge… Continue reading

    Becoming a Bean
  • A Nun’s Habit

    Several years ago, a friend of mine with a connection to a local nursery gave me a plant that was being discarded because it was “a bit off”. She told me this particular plant was called a “Nun’s Hood Orchid” (Phaius Tankervilleae in gardener-speak) because its flowers resemble a nun’s wimple, which for decades was… Continue reading

    A Nun’s Habit

Glean Daily

Lessons from the backyard by Jane E. Johnson