{this moment} - A Friday ritual. A single photo - no words -
capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary
moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
If you're inspired to do the same, leave a link to your 'moment' in the comments for all to find and see.
Friday, July 13, 2012
Monday, July 9, 2012
On The Book Stand
There are always piles of books in my house. A certain
subject matter catches a family member’s interest, and all of the books on the
relevant subject are ripped from our library upstairs and strewn across an
ottoman, the couch, or the table. Research is committed in a frenzy. At the end
of the day, the only thing one can do against the onslaught of such an
encouraging mess is pile the abandoned research materials neatly and wait for
the erstwhile scholar to return to it the next day. On my book stand right now are
some of our books on herbs. My plan was to wait until fall to start the
planning of the herb garden... but I find I just can't wait. Most of these
books have been occupying real estate on my shelves for years, waiting until I
had the space (and enough years in the same place ahead of me) to contemplate
actually planting the garden I’ve dreamed of. Oh my… visions of dried herbs
hanging in huge bunches from my rafters, scenting the air all winter, of rows
of jars full of lotions and salves, vinegars and tinctures. Perfumed oils,
soaps. Spinning wool dyed with things grown by my own hands. These very
thoughts have caused me wistful sighs for almost a decade. Now I am so close.
The space allotted here for the new herb garden is huge –
larger by far than any whole gardening space I have ever had access to. It
stretches along the southeastern side of the house, and all the way to the
current tree line, something like 70 feet from east to west, and 60 feet from
north to south. All of that in full sun, and still plenty of room to tuck the
shade lovers in under the trees. A dream gardening space. But goodness, how do
you even start to plan something that large, especially when you know that it
will be the main view from a house with so many windows? Well, I should have
started with the time honored advice of my mother, grandmother, and I am quite
sure her mother before her. “One bed at a time.”
We’ve had this discussion about my tendency towards hubris,
yes?
I decided that I could not possibly start planning without a
complete inventory of the herbs I wanted to plant. Truthfully this is possibly
one of my silliest notions to date, but sure, why not, let’s roll with it. I
will say this, when my husband was presented with a partial list of the species
I dreamily envisioned populating neat raised beds and running wildly into each
other in the larger back beds (like miniature wild fields) he raised an eyebrow
and stopped telling me that it was too much space. I started in the kitchen
cabinets, thinking not unreasonably that a good place to begin was by looking
at the herbs and spices we already use. Then the tea cabinet. I had already
received a pot of stinging nettles as a house warming present from a
like-minded friend. “Nettle tea,” I explained to my other guests, “is
MARVELOUS.” A host of other plants from that area of the kitchen joined the
list; chamomile, peppermint, dandelion, licorice, purple coneflower, red
clover, spearmint, the list went on. Then it was upstairs to the first aid
supplies. Arnica, and witch hazel joined the list. Then I started to add those
herbs I had always wanted to grow – lavender, and feverfew, and roses OH MY!
And that, well, that my friends is where I started to come off the tracks. That
is when the books came down out of their lofty library and started taking up
space beside my chair. Because after all, I wouldn’t want to miss ANY
potentially useful variety. “What do you mean I don’t suffer from gout? You never know.” 48 species in the farm
journal later, and not a dye or perfume specific plant in sight, I realized I
had a problem. I had herbs written down that I had not clue-one about growing
or using. They had just sounded so terribly useful. But visions of spending my
late winter armpit deep in plant starters full of things I might not even use sobered me up quickly. Time to back
up the crazy train. Once again, I realize that my efforts here must be
practical as well as beautiful, and that I cannot afford to spend my time
dreaming. I have dreamed my whole life on my way to this place, and now it is
time to act. Planning and research before planting are still necessary, but I
have to be careful not to fall into the old habit of dreaming about the possibilities
in lieu of building in the present.
Friday, July 6, 2012
City Kids Homeschooling
I wrote a guest blog post as part of a series hosted at City Kids Homeschooling by a lovely lady named Kerry McDonald who is spending this week on a farmcation with her family. Over the last few weeks, Kerry's questions and emails have helped me understand more clearly what I am doing here, and why it is important for us (among so many others) to continue this work. My post ran yesterday, but I had taken the last couple of days off and taken a mini-vacation of my own so I am posting this now. I would recommend the entire series, and the blog in general, especially to those of you who choose to homeschool. I've really been enjoying Kerry's writing and insights.
You can find my part of the series here.
You can find my part of the series here.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Morning Chores
Chore is one of those unpopular words around here, even with
the grownups. I don’t know that anyone really likes doing them, but one of the
things we’re learning is that on a farm there are some chores that can be put
off, and some that absolutely cannot. Around here the ones that cannot usually
directly relate to caring for those who cannot care for themselves. Livestock
chores are invariably stinky and messy, but they make up for it by the magic proximity
of living things. Quite frankly, there is no one in our family who cannot spend
hours just watching our fowl do their thing. They are amazingly busy creatures.
Every morning in good weather, the ducks are gathered up and
put into an outside yard. The chicks (who are still small enough to escape the
yard with alarming frequency) are then turned into the duck brooder to turn the
night’s accumulation of wet shavings into the dry litter underneath, thus
wasting less litter while at the same time allowing this lazy farmer to avoid
one of the nastiest chores – stirring duck poop. Susan, who is all of seven,
helps me with these chores. She helps me move the ducks into the yard, then
climbs into the chicken brooder and gently moves each chicken into the adjacent
duck brooder. She does an amazing job keeping the flock calm; she moves slowly
and scoops them up from underneath. This creates very little fuss. She’s
actually gotten to the point where she can do it completely unsupervised while
I do the heavier chores of lifting, cleaning, and filling the feeders and
waterers. I’ve taken to calling her our chicken whisperer. Now that it’s summer
vacation she also spends at least an hour each day in the yard with the birds,
socializing them. This is actually a very important job, as ducks lose their domestication
in a matter of days if not exposed to people, and we’ve noticed that just
moving them back and forth is not enough to keep them docile instead of
terrified when people are around.
During all of this work she is learning. She is learning about
birds; how fragile they are, how much food they eat and water they drink, their
habits and basic social behavior. She learns about their anatomy (“Wait, eggs
come out of WHERE?”), and their biological history. Learning that chickens are
dinosaurs was a pretty big hit with the under 5 foot tall crowd, all the way
around. Truthfully, we grownups on the farm think it’s pretty cool too. But
most of all she’s learning about herself. She’s learning that the animals need
attention no less because she doesn’t feel like it, or doesn’t feel well. A
skill I know will serve her well, especially should she decide on motherhood
later on. Most important however, is that these animals are giving her the gift
of her own silence, of her stillness. They give her a place within herself that
is quiet, that she can use as a foundation for building the kind of person she
wants to be. It is a place where she can listen to her own thoughts and dreams.
Where she can learn to always be honest with herself.
This gift, given by the birds, the trees, the wind, is one
that I actively cultivate. “Go OUTSIDE.” I have learned was not just about my
mother’s irritation, but was also about giving me the greatest of foundations;
the Earth itself. I am continuing this tradition, and have been pleasantly surprised
to watch a groaned, “Oh NOOOO!” turn into a perky, “Okay!” over the last few
weeks. I watch from these huge windows as they build entire worlds, wage mock
wars, or sometimes just sit and listen to the wind. It is an amazing thing to
have that much room to run.
And I have come to a conclusion. This is their work. This is
the work of childhood, this foundation building. And what they are doing has
nothing to do with tests or structure, playgroups or organized sports. It has
to do with the freedom to explore themselves and their world without a parent
or other adult in sight. With the freedom to just be. They are not on display, though
mind you, I can see them anywhere in the yard from the house. But they FEEL
free. I do not disillusion them. I
remember my own childhood, how that time out of the house was my solace, space
and quiet enough to sit with my own thoughts. How, even now, the out of doors
is my solace.
And the backlash of all of this freedom? They are more responsible.
And happier. Isn’t that just amazing? I sometimes wonder what that says about
human nature and the direction of parenting in our culture. For the past 150
years or so we have moved away from the earth, and stuck our children into increasingly
terrible public schools or increasingly expensive private ones. We as a culture
have moved away from the home. First the men, then the women, and now the
children. We have moved ourselves away from our hearths, away from our hearts,
for what? Security? Doesn’t seem like that one’s working out. How about
happiness? Do we have that? Depression and mental illness are at an all-time
high in America. So why? I can’t think of an answer.
Now I’m not saying that education is bad for you, or that
farming is the answer. Neither of those things are true. But what I am saying
is this. What if a connection to the Earth and our food is a basic human need,
no less than companionship or the feeling of safety? And what if we could
fulfill that need in our children with something as simple as a few backyard
chickens, or a couple of pots of vegetables on the patio? A window box herb
garden? What if we could make the world a better place with something as simple
as morning chores?
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