We had rain today. No need to water.
I’ve been watching for this moment since December, when I first started thinking about rain and restraint as entries in the garden’s ledger. The forecast said rain would come this week, and this morning—January 14th—it did. I wrote that line in my garden notes, and it felt like permission—permission to skip a task, to let the weather do the work, to trust that sometimes the best thing a gardener can do is nothing at all.
That line carries more weight than a simple weather report. It’s a tiny entry in what I’ve come to think of as the narrative economy of the garden: a living ledger where rain and restraint are entries in the book, where every choice to intervene—or not—tells a story about stewardship, productivity, and rest.
I’d been anticipating this rain day for weeks, watching the long-range forecasts, waiting to see if the weather would prove the point I’d been drafting in December. And it did.
Why doing nothing is still tending the land
In gardening, doing nothing isn’t laziness. It’s discernment.
When rain falls, the soil receives what it needs without my hand on the hose. The cabbages drink. The turnip greens perk up. They’ve been prepped with the ‘Ol’ Way’ formulas—specifically organic fertilizers like bone and blood meal—to ensure they have the nitrogen and root strength to handle this damp chill. And for my container-grown brassicas, the rain provides a welcome break from my usual three-pass watering rhythm. The early red acre keeps thriving in the humid cold. My job that day isn’t to water—it’s to notice that watering isn’t needed.
That noticing is its own form of labor. It requires presence, observation, and the discipline to step back when stepping in would do more harm than good. In a culture that equates activity with value, restraint can feel like failure. But in the garden, over-intervention leads to rot, shallow roots, and plants that never learn to reach deep for what they need.
Restraint is a form of tending. It’s just one we don’t often count.
What a skipped watering can teach us about overwork
The garden has been teaching me something I keep forgetting in my work: not all days require the same output.
Some days demand planting, weeding, harvesting—full engagement. Other days, the work is to walk through, take notes, and let things grow without interference. The soil is doing its work. The rain has done its work. My work is to trust the process and not manufacture tasks out of anxiety.
I think about this when I open my laptop and feel the pull to “be productive”—to draft another post, start another project, optimize another system. But productivity culture has no room for rain days. It asks us to water even when the soil is saturated, to intervene even when intervention adds no value.
The result? Burnout. Shallow work. Creative systems that rot from over-tending.
The garden’s lesson is simple: rest isn’t the absence of work. It’s a different kind of work. It’s the patience to let processes unfold. It’s the trust that growth happens even when you’re not watching. It’s the courage to write “no need to water” and mean it.
From cabbage to content: trusting slow growth
In the Humid Cold series, I’ve been exploring what it means to garden in a climate that’s shifting—where the old rules don’t quite hold, but the new ones haven’t fully formed yet. Rain, rest, and restraint are part of that navigation.
My cabbages are growing slow this season. So are the turnip greens. Everything except the early red acre is taking its time, adjusting to the strange mix of humidity and cold that defines Zone 8b winters now. Tomorrow, I’ll be sharing a full ‘how-to’ on these brassicas, but for those tracking their own data, this cabbage growing guide is a great baseline for the technical specs they need to thrive.
While we’re currently navigating the damp rhythms of the humid cold, the transition to the next season happens faster than the soil suggests.
For those already looking toward the next turn of the wheel, my 26 Steps to Thriving in Spring Gardening provides the full A-Z framework you’ll need to hit the ground running once the frost breaks.
And I’ve stopped worrying about it.
Slow growth isn’t failed growth. It’s adaptation. The plants are building root systems, conserving energy, responding to conditions I can’t fully control. My job isn’t to force them faster. It’s to give them the conditions they need and step back.
The same is true for content, for creative work, for building a body of ideas. Some projects grow fast. Others take their time. And the ones that grow slow often grow deeper—more resilient, more rooted, more able to weather the next shift.
The rain will come again
Here’s what the garden keeps teaching me: You don’t have to manufacture growth. You have to create conditions for it and then get out of the way.
Rain will come. Seasons will turn. Work will need doing again soon enough. But today, the soil is wet. The plants are fed. And the only task on my list is to notice that no task is needed.
In a world that equates busyness with worth, that small act—choosing not to water—feels almost rebellious. But it’s not rebellion. It’s stewardship. It’s the recognition that a garden, like a life, like a creative practice, has its own rhythm.
And sometimes, the most productive thing you can do is trust the rain and rest.
We can grow together
What zone are you growing in? What are you tending this season—whether it’s plants, projects, or patience? Drop a comment below. I’d love to hear what’s growing in your garden and how you’re navigating your own rhythm of work and rest.

Leave a Reply