Sunday, May 11, 2014

Mother's Day

My daughters and I -- we have a floating Mother's Day celebration. It's often difficult to get us together on the designated day. I'm out of town, or, as in this year -- they're out and about. On the east coast, last I checked. So we stall it a little. And, too, I'm still flush with birthday celebrations. I can wait.

But this doesn't mean that I do not think of this Sunday as somehow mother-centered. The theme comes up. It's in my head. And when I talk to my own mom, or to my girls, we treat it as a day that truly does stand for something. We acknowledge it. We wouldn't think of not sending Mother's Day greetings.

But from the point of view of farmette work, it's just another day of intense gardening. It's warm. Too warm, Ed would comment. Perfect, from my perspective.


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(at sunrise)



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(a morning drink)



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(it's Scotch's turn)


A porch breakfast. I tell Ed to snap a photo. You know, because it's Mother's Day.


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And I tell the chickens to behave. I feel like I'm their designated mother. They dutifully leave three eggs for me, right on schedule.


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Many, many years ago, working in the garden on Mother's Day was a real treat. A time to indulge my preoccupation with perennial flowers. These days, of course, I merely continue the work of yesterday and the day before.

And though I do pause to take in the heady smell of plum trees in bloom...


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...and I smile as I watch the chickens attack a raspberry cane (be my guest! we have millions of them!)...


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...I have to admit, when the time comes to work on the raspberry fields, I approach the task with a big sigh. Both Ed and I are so sick of this project that the digging, lifting and heaving seem especially difficult, draining, never ending.

It would be terrific if I could say we're almost done. We're not. I'd estimate we have a good seven days' work left. I only wish Ed hadn't reminded me that if the field isn't maintained, it'll turn into one huge area of weeds again. Fussing over flower beds is rewarding. Raspberry fields? Only mildly so.

Still, by dumping a lot of chips, we'll be keeping the weeds to a minimum. Let's hope I'm motivated to maintain the field for years on end. If not -- well, we gave it a push in the right direction.


In other Mother's Day news -- we did go to a gardening center to replace three of my many many lavender bushes. These guys had a rough winter and though most survived, I had a few casualties.

And then there is the matter of dinner. If ever a meal demonstrated what it means to be a mother, I think mine was a classic. I had told Ed I'd make chili for a couple of days. We have several bags of last year's tomatoes in the freezer and thoughts of planting new seedlings soon made me want to hurry up and use up last year's batch. But I lost my focus. In tracking my daughters' travels back from the east coast (such a motherly task!), I noted that they left their destination on time. Good! Maybe they'll beat the storms in Chicago. I chopped tomatoes and clicked on the website informing me of the progress of their flight. Until suddenly I got the dreaded screen telling me that there was no more information. Please call this number if you want to know more.

I call, chopping tomatoes all the while. A recording tells me their flight has been diverted. Why? Recordings don't answer whys. I chop more tomatoes. I click, call, click call. They are now in South Bend, Indiana. What now? Click, chop, call.

As I write this, I am able to piece together what must have happened. Bad weather, small plane, diversion. Ed asks -- why are you so intense about it? It's not as if flying is unsafe.  Well now, mothers don't turn off their tracking minds just because something is "safe." Mothers go into the heads of their children. They know that those children will be anxious about getting home on time for work, for husbands and fiances. When their children are (ostensibly) anxious, mothers are anxious. (I write about mothers and not father s because, well, it's Mother's Day.)

I chopped up so many frozen tomatoes tonight (calling the update line, watching radar maps, clicking, calling, clicking) that we have enough chili to for dinners through at least Thursday. Think of it as Mother's Day chili.

My daughters are on their final leg of their travels at last. The chickens are tucked and set for the night. Ed is scrubbing down the stove I managed to splatter with my distracted chili cooking. All's right with the world. For now. Today. On this Mother's Day.

9 comments:

  1. Eek! I like to use Flightaware too, and not because I'm anxious but because I always feel excited for them in their travels. But I see I'm setting myself up for the awful blank screen. I would chop the hell out of those tomatoes!! All's well that ends well. Happy Mother's Day, every day, Nina!

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    1. Thank you! I'm sure you had a wonderful day too!
      Typically, I don't track. But since I don't text (I have resisted it - a mistake on my part), I'm not likely to get instant notices from them of various delays and adventures, so when the weather is nasty -- as it was in the Midwest yesterday, I keep myself informed. That's a maternal habit if I ever saw one because there's no reason for it. I don't track, after all, their car trips! (Maybe I would if there was the technology!)

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  2. Just beware that the weather coming your way is not good. Severe, in fact. I track the weather because my friend lives in Des Moines, and her local internet tower got hit by lightning yesterday so they have no internet there... until it can be fixed. I see Madison is on the list of targets for this nasty weather so just be forewarned...

    xxxx

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    1. The nice thing about living in the UPPER Midwest is that storms rarely do damage up here. Not never, just rarely. Ours for today are slated to be of the standard spring fare. Honestly, I would not have the stomach for living in places like Kansas. So many tornadoes! I could not get used to it...
      Thanks for watching over us! I do the same for you northeasterners!
      xo

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  3. I am glad they were safely diverted and I hope they will get home safely and not too terribly late. Flying in bad weather -- or waiting for travelers who are flying in bad weather -- is stressful. Belated Happy Mother's Day to you! At least your chicks were home for the holiday. Do the white chickens lay white eggs and does Scotch lay brown eggs? Or is that too simplistic and stereotyped?

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    1. And to you as well! Did you get breakfast in bed??
      This I can tell you about chicken eggs: whatever color egg you lay, it'll be yours always. As it happens, my two white hens lay white eggs and Scotch, the brown hen lays brown eggs. But when I had Lexie the devil herself, she was white and she left ... sort of mildly pink eggs. Go figure.

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    2. No breakfast in bed....I have a teenager who is not up at that ungodly hour to make me breakfast. But I did get a lovely vegetarian cookbook and dinner made from it!

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  4. happy belated greetings. so glad the diversion turned out all right. maybe texting is in order! you take the most wonderful photos of those sweet chickens! ox

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    1. Thank you thank you! I would take the plunge and text, but I have this good cell phone plan that includes zero allowance for texting and I hate to disturb it. And, too, you get so stuck in your old habits! Argh! Must change, must embrace the new! (One of these days.)

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