Thursday, May 24, 2012
pairs
When the trees around you are very large, excessively so and
a front with high winds passes through, it really is a fantastic, or unnerving,
or thrilling experience (depending on your disposition) to be right there, in
the thick of it, watching the limbs heave and sway...
Sitting on the porch (grading away! oops, sorry!), I feel
protected. Especially since the direction of the gusts is such that the old willow (with
very brittle limbs) bends its massive weight away from the
farmhouse.
The odd part is that because of our tall trees, the
courtyard of the farmette – meaning the woodchipped space between the
farmhouse, garage, sheepshed, barn and writer’s shed – is always rather calm.
And in the heat of the afternoon sun, you’d think not even a
chipmunk would be stirring.
You’d be wrong. I read that the little devils sleep fifteen
hours per day and though this may be impressive to the human who can hardly eek
out seven or eight, it does still leave nine hours unaccounted for. Me, I can
tell you where the extended family of our resident rodents is partying. Right
in their favorite place of carnival-like delirium: the front flower bed.
And so it should come as no surprise that I want to
photograph emergent flowers. Catch ‘em quick before they get carted off for a
meal of all meals.
It is a very hot day. We bike to Paul’s because we feel we
should, rather than because it’s pleasant. The wind is so strong that I mark spaces
between tall trees, in the same way one plays musical chairs, staying close to
one until the next becomes safe.
We bike, too, to the Thursday afternoon market, hoping for
some fruits, finally some fruits – it’s so hot I feel we should not still be
buying fruits from California and our frozen peaches from last summer just aren't cutting it anymore. They may be quaintly delectable in January or February,
but now they just taste slimy and a tad old.
Well now... I see strawberries!
The first of the season! Fantastic! How much? Oh, okay... Maybe
next time....
I’m delighted with the weather and with life in general,
only I would not mind just a small interruption in all this glorious sunny
stuff. I admit it – I’m a little bit hoping for rain. Spot watering for an hour
and a half each evening is good, but a solid soak would be even better. And if
there is a torrential rain that would wash away our lettuce patch – why that
would be okay with me as well! At least I would not have to witness torn up
beds the morning after the chipmunks’ wild night out.
...even as my own wild night consists of clearing supper
dishes, watching reruns of Modern Family and forcing myself to stay awake to
put up this post, to the tune of Ed’s rhythmic snoring.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
daily update
Up late, up early, cat in, cat out, the cool breeze of the
late night comes into the room and stirs things up a bit and finally, there is the light of another
beautiful morning.
Ed’s out on the roof taking down the last of the gutter hangers.
The tail end of last year’s decision to try life without gutters.
They just collect leaves – he tells me. Well I know that. I
used to clean the gutters in my past suburban home, often far too late in the
season, when the slime and rot were already half frozen. Still, shouldn’t we be
in the business of redirecting water?
But, a year has passed, gutterless, and so down come the
hangers and it all gets posted on Craigslist where maybe they’ll sell but
probably they will not. We have several items going on Craigslist -- things I would have said had no retail value at all, except every once in a while a call will come and someone will say -- that old screen door...?
I graded today. I know, I promised not to write “I graded
today,” but I met my goal and that is quite unusual and so I make this
exception. Seven more days and I should be done. Summer starts then.
In the meantime, Lee, our resident farmer, is working her quarter acre in the back.
We have had several conversations with her about what’s happening to
the fraction of the field that she has thus far ignored and sometimes we understand each other perfectly and sometimes we understand each other not at all and on this issue it is more the latter. Maybe there is a sister and maybe she is waiting for something, or maybe it is a fragment of land sacrificed to the gods who have decided that there shall be no vegetables grown on it this year.
Our own plantings (and this would include veggies or
flowers) are both thriving and being lost to chipmunk lunch. Each morning I go out to see
what’s chomped off. Today, it’s the penstemon. Yesterday, it was the phlox. Every day a
surprise.
Behind Ed's back I can whisper that The Cat is not guilt free either. He loves to walk across the veggie patch and
most recently, he moves nimbly through my most prominent flower bed,
then finds a spot between the Daylilies and the Echinacea Purpurea and settles in. Tail
sweetly wrapped around the Echinacea tag.
Does he crush some of the plants? Maybe, but at least his mark is less pronounced, less in your face than the bitten
off flower heads that are purely the chipmunk’s handicraft.
And still, I cannot complain. They -- the creatures, beasts and birds -- are who they are and if
my plant is destroyed today, it will grow back tomorrow or the next year.
That’s just the way it is.
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
on this day
He can ignore my advice on most anything I have to offer,
but he cannot ignore it when I tell him he has a mole on his back. He can’t see
it, but I can. Go to the doctor, I tell him.
He (almost) never listens to that advice.
But, yesterday, I had my moles checked and some promptly
removed and I tell him that this is part of being of advanced age. You do this kind of thing.
You cannot avoid it.
I’ll go to my old dermatologist, if he’s still around. I
liked him.
When did you last see him?
Long long time ago. And he was already old then.
Long long time ago. And he was already old then.
Ed’s banking on the guy being retired. Or worse. But an
Internet search reveals that the doc is still there! At age 84, accepting new
patients!
So off he goes and I tell him I saved his life and he scoffs
and tells me that he acquiesced to the visit to make me happy. Some beloveds
get flowers and candy, I get my guy to go have a mole removed.
Can you
imagine, Ed marvels, he doesn’t have a computer in his office. Just a typewriter.
Electric? I ask. And is he married? Ed looks at me in wonderment that I should
still ask questions for which I know he would not have an answer. (We do that to
each other.)
In the meantime, I am done grading for two out of my three
courses, but that’s not saying much because the third has the largest number of
students and they’re of a generation that’s become demonically speedy with typing
because the number of pages submitted has swelled over the years.
No matter. I start in on this third course. If I work awfully hard, I’ll be
done by the end of the month.
But I need breaks. You can’t read essays without
interruption. Pages blur and run together and you confuse one person’s mistake
with another’s brilliance and so you have to refresh yourself. I do so by once
again attacking the raspberry patch.
That patch is so overgrown right now that the weeds exceed
in height the raspberry canes. And I mean the really tall, unclipped raspberry
canes. I’ve already devoted some days to pruning and clipping (and I've hardly made a
dent), but today I make one huge effort at getting the weeds on one side – the
side of the path leading to the sheep shed – under control so that a person
could, for example, walk there without being attacked.
But in the process, I am, in fact, attacked. Whatever prickly stuff
inhabits that patch is now fighting (and winning) the battle against my
invasion and I am left with some horrible rash up and down my arms, a rash that
alternates between an itch and a tingle – none of it very pleasant.
I say to Ed -- I saved your raspberries and ruined my arms
in the process.
It’ll pass, he tells me without much concern.
Of course, everything passes. By definition, life passes,
rashes disappear, skin wrinkles, raspberry canes suffocate and boyfriends get spots for you to see and point out.
The sun is so bright, so very bright and when I go on my
bike to Paul’s to meet Ed there, I have this complete sense of joy in riding
against the May breeze, even though I’m past the wistful years when sunshine
was only a friend, a soothing pal, to love and trust and hold sacred.
Life can’t be perfect. Not for more than a short stretch, here
and there.
At least that’s what I’m told.
Monday, May 21, 2012
a light at the end of the path
[A note to those who commented on the unusual – indeed,
perhaps one and only – blog photo of Ed and me. In the past, many have tried to
take a picture of the two of us, but Ed rarely behaves for such stuff. The absurd results were never worth
posting. This time he let me proceed, with the camera, supported by woodchips, leaning
clumsily on the hood of an old car, set to shoot with the self-timer. We had a hard time
keeping the ridiculously abundant pear tree branches that overhang our
parking space out of the photo. So, in many many ways, it is a once in a blue moon
shot.]
Well now, these weeks are going to be a challenge. The
weather is spectacular, the work is now ever before me, I’m tentatively
agreeing to provide assistance with a court case, and my garden needs watering.
Can it be more complicated than that?
Let me talk about four photos that I took today. The first
was not from here at all, but, instead, taken just before a meeting I had downtown with a student. After parking good old
Rosie in some tight space where many would think she does not belong (they
would be wrong to think that), I looked up and caught my breath at the loveliness of this:
...and I thought to myself – is there such a thing as an indifferent
spring garden?
In the evening I water the farmette beds (rain? What rain? Is there ever
rain?), reversing the order of operations, just because that is the most exciting
thing I can do with this terribly long (but not unpleasant) task. As I tote the
watering can to the bed by the driveway, I note that Ed is pounding in the
fourth (constructed by him) solar-lit lamp post into the driveway. Later, at night, we walk out to admire
the beams of light. Why
do you suppose they’re star-like? Ed asks. He doesn’t really expect an
answer. I make do in life without knowing the answers to answerable questions
even as I worry about those without obvious replies.
And so the second photo is from the dark night -- made lighter by our trail of tiny lamps.
Finally, I have to describe another significant event from this day: for
over a week now Ed has been (more or less) gently pointing out that the rhubarb
is out of control. It spills onto the path to the farmhouse door (I did not
plant it there!) and I haven’t a clue as to what should become of it. I still
have bags of frozen chopped stalks from last year.
To move things toward some kind of a resolution, two days ago
I finally trimmed the plant back. Somewhat. And today, I decided to
improvise and bake things up in my own bizarre rendition of a fresh rhubarb/last
year’s frozen raspberry French tart.
Shockingly, it is quite tasty.
The tall iris blooms, the tight bundles of dianthus, the burst of golden coreopsis, the fast paced mint, the chives, the rhubarb -- they take away attention from the ravaged-by-wild-beast (or bird, or likely both beast and bird) strawberries. You have to focus on the success stories in your
yard...
...and not mind the sacrificed handful that nature has claimed for its own
uses.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
people
Hey! It’s Sunday morning! I say this with energy, as if something important is about to happen.
I thought you’d given up on weekly cleanings...
I have. It’s been two weeks since we vacuumed.
That’s an obvious prod on my part.
I can’t say that Ed doesn’t help around the farmhouse. He spends
a good part of each day either fixing something, or tending to some portion of the land. (Since most tools here are of the aging kind, they often need a
repair. And the land is one constant plea for help.)
But the idea of cleaning the house on a regular basis?
That’s a source of amusement for him. Meaning, he’s amused that I insist on
devoting that much time to it.
It’s another one of those very warm days and we hurry, so that we can get to the outside work before the heat settles in for an afternoon of pea-soup air. Well, hurry is
perhaps the wrong word. I left "hurry" behind on campus. At the farmette, our pace is either "slow" or "with interruptions."
We’re focused on the (dirt) driveway today. People have a
hard time backing out of it, especially in the dark, especially in the winter.
Ed came across little solar-powered lamps at Target and we picked up a half dozen to
line the road. Mind you, these are not expensive gizmos (retail price of
each: $2; we, too, were surprised). Ed thought to attach them to tall wooden
posts and now we have the task of pounding the posts into the packed dirt road.
Ed does the pounding.
Too suburban? He asks after putting in the third lamp.
No! Solid and cool!
In the late afternoon, Ed and I ride into town (on his
motorbike; Rosie can't support two people) for the celebration of my friend’s
graduation. My friend did the complicated and difficult task of retraining while attending to kids, work, passions, you name it, she did it. Ed doesn’t usually
step out of the house for social endeavors, but for this, we’re both on board.
Congrats, friend!
the graduate
At this most wonderfully event, I run into a person I knew very many years ago. We had kids the same age. She was utterly
angelic toward mine in years when it all seemed so complicated and work and
kids and kids and life just weren’t fitting together so perfectly. Her husband
was my kids' doctor and I had the habit of saying (truthfully) that one big
reason why I would never consider leaving Madison is because I cannot imagine
ever finding a pediatrician as good as him.
Funny how when you get older all these stories come back. Vivid now, as if no time had passed, as if you still had kids in the preschool playground and the future for them, for you was one great blank page, without the dense script of lived years filling it all in...
My daughter and her fiancée are at the farmhouse for
dinner. And for the first time, it is warm enough to do a comfortable Sunday
night meal out on the porch.
Eventually they leave and I am about to slide behind my laptop screen, when
Ed says – let’s play tennis.
And we do play, and it’s a beautiful night and my game is predictably funny and awful all at the same time, and his
game is just slightly timid and I can't help but feel the laughter coming to the surface again -- the giddiness after a good meal and from the good companionship that is ours.
... especially not now and especially not at the farmhouse. Cleaned up and spiffy and vacuumed for the week(s) ahead.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
like summer, only not really
Near 90 today. Hot, deliciously hot air, so that the windows
stay open all night, fully open. In the morning, there’s not a doubt
that breakfast belongs on the porch.
Ed, are you ready (for your cereal and fruit)?
No, gotta work, it’ll be hot... gotta shovel the chips...
But within minutes, he’s on the porch with me. No one can resist cereal and fruits and the gentle rock of
a wrought iron chair..
I go to the market with my daughter. It’s crowded –
extremely so. Graduation weekend means that thousands of graduating Wisconsin
students are looking for things to do with their parents, aunts, uncles. The
market! You have to see the market!
Yep, they were all there.To admire, to taste.
In the afternoon, I grade.
Well, for a while. There are hours of woodchip shoveling
too, in the hot hot air of a day that is still a month short of the real summer
season.
And maybe because the flower beds are looking so good and
so he wants to lend his support to the project, or maybe because they don’t
look good enough and so he wants to improve them, or maybe he wants to distract
me from the incredible damage done to the strawberries by the chipmunks – for
whatever reason, Ed offers to go with me to pick up five daylilies from the Flower
Factory. Probably our last trip there this year. After spring planting, gardening
becomes all about maintenance.
Ah, the Flower Factory... The place that has grown in leaps and bounds in marketing perennials -- at the same time that I have grown from being mildly intrigued by planting them to being fully dazzled by their various quirks and permutations. Of course, part of the joy of visiting the place is in seeing what's growing in their own gardens.
We make the trip on the motorbike on a very windy day. Windy
rides are always an adventure and especially when you’re trying to tote five daylilies
in the milk cart behind you. We manage. Just barely.
And then evening comes and it is time to water. I pick our first radish...
...and lots and lots of rhubarb and then I move through the pattern I've developed for my watering ritual and I have to
say, nothing, nothing is more satisfying than standing with a hose on a hot
“summer” evening, thinking of little more than how pretty drops of moisture look on
emerging flowers.
Friday, May 18, 2012
onwards upwards
This is the right way to end a school year: faces of
students appear, one after another – graduating. Once just starting, now at the end of it. Faces,
faces, with parents, lovers, friends, mostly happy faces, hiding worries. Not
today, no, today celebrates the accomplishments, the graduation, the future lawyers, those
who’ll help you when some grave injustice befalls you. (You forgot that that’s
what lawyers do? I’m here to remind you!)
I am up early, but not early enough. Ed says (as he comes
back up after letting Isis, the restless one, out) – beautiful morning. I say –
oh, maybe it’s time to take a look at a sunrise over Lake Waubesa! Just two
miles east of us, a fast scoot on old Rosie. Except I forget that it’s May and
in May you need to be up and away before 6 to catch a sunrise.
But, it is indeed a beautiful morning. Early morning always looks good in the "old orchard" of the farmette.
Eventually Ed goes off for his Friday meetings and I
get on Mr. Red, peddling to the Monona Terrace for the Law School graduation.
And, as it is a special day, I can, while biking, look up
and see a doe prance off, even at noon – a rare time for deer to prance in
front of you.
So, they’re off, those wonderful wonderful students of ours
– past the little kid stage...

...past the first year at law school stage, they are almost there, almost part of the world of balancing work and family or no family, or work and friends, or something, something to keep them grounded or maybe the proper word should be 'afloat.'
...past the first year at law school stage, they are almost there, almost part of the world of balancing work and family or no family, or work and friends, or something, something to keep them grounded or maybe the proper word should be 'afloat.'
One of the graduation speakers, no, sorry, two of the
graduation speakers talk in one way or another about the need for that balance.
Ah, yes. If only the employers were listening and taking notes!
Me, I’d like to say that I’m with you, those who would love
1. a job and 2. one with balance. We
will rise above the clamor that pushes the young professionals to do nothing but work, we will stand united, we will
reject the pressure to give our souls to the workplace! (That would be my own
revolutionary call.)
Or maybe they, the young professionals, already know and fight for what it is that matters?
For now, these weighty thoughts are dispersed, floating somewhere, but not here, not in the giddy hallways and ballrooms...
the faculty gather
... where graduates pass through and have photos taken, in hot black robes, on a hot May afternoon in Madison.
the student commencement speakers
Congratulations sweet students – adults when you came, but
so much stronger today, after the toil of it all, so much stronger and – I do
believe this – wiser and, I hope, happier.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
just say no
It’s not easy for me to say “no” to opportunity. Maybe it's because I’m an
immigrant – one who came here alone, focused on taking chances and risky steps.
Two ideas percolated in recent days and today I had to give
some kind of an answer.
The first had to do with a legal issue. Should I work on it?
If it succeeds, it may be financially rewarding. Or not. Ed tells me most large
gains grow out of chancy investments of time. And yet, wont I feel hugely
frustrated if, after several years' work, nothing comes of it? Just
say no, my internal voice shouts at me, just say no! But my immigrant’s brain
can’t just say no. And so I sit on the fence. One more day – I tell the party
who is asking for my input. Just give me one more day to think about it.
The second idea has to do with the writer’s shed. You remember
the writer’s shed? Years ago, before we came to an agreement about the farmhouse, Ed put great efforts into constructing the writer's shed -- a place where I could write, sleep, stay for a day, or two,
or three...
We tore down the structure that
once stood there and, with the help of Amos, the shed builder, put in the structure that stands there now. But we never finished it. I agreed to move into the farmhouse instead. The writer's shed stands incomplete. A shell of what was once to be.
And that’s a shame. Recently, we've tossed around the idea that we should put in the floor, the little kitchen, the shower, toilet. And then we
should rent it! Not year round, but occasionally! A real money maker!
And yet...
So many times we’ve rented rooms in private homes and looked
at each other to say – who would want to do this? Who would want to cater to
the needs of grouchy travelers? Who would want to listen to complaints about
bad TV reception or an overabundant mosquito population?
But, but, we could rent it just to special, preapproved
people! I tell Ed.
One more house to maintain...
We could meet interesting folks!
*You* could meet interesting people. People who would complain about the grouch on the premises. Me. Besides, do you really want to lose your privacy?
I smile. I wrote about my colonoscopy on Ocean. What privacy could he possibly be referring to?
*You* could meet interesting people. People who would complain about the grouch on the premises. Me. Besides, do you really want to lose your privacy?
I smile. I wrote about my colonoscopy on Ocean. What privacy could he possibly be referring to?
Just say no, just say no...
I will, I will, but why is it that I am regretting saying no?
In both cases?
We bike to Paul’s café. We pass Lee, tending the fields
south of us. When are you planting in our quarter acre?
I have planted! Beans and cucumbers. And my sister will
plant some more!
We swing by the local market, too. The last of the perfect
asparagus. And spring spinach. And, of course, as every week come spring and summer, Madison’s best baguettes.
Finally -- home.
...Where the iris stands tall, the tomatoes are getting
chomped down by the chipmunks, and the lettuce seems too stubby and tastes...like lettuce.
the next phase
Surely you do not want to hear that I did a clean sweep of
three grocery stores today? Is there a story in that? Perhaps not a story, but room for a smile: does anyone else walk away from Woodman's giddy, after loading up a shopping cart with many, many jugs of
fruit juice (blueberry-grape-wild cherry -- mmmm! Diluted with sparkling lemon mineral water -- the best!) and many many packs of sparkling lemon mineral water?
And I’m no longer surprised when, at Trader Joe’s, the clerk
asks if I make my own trail mix since my cart is full of unsalted pistachios, lightly salted cashew pieces and peanuts. Oh and how could I forget – so many containers of chocolate covered
raisins. (The answer is -- I do not.)
I venture out to town so infrequently that I now buy as if
for a winter season in North Dakota. Anticipating a powerful snowstorm. That
will bury me deep for four months. Without access to unsalted pistachios, chocolate covered raisins and sparkling lemon mineral water.
At the farmette, my focus has...evolved. To grading – but
please don’t let me get into the habit of repeating day in and day out for the
next two weeks that I’m grading. Know that whatever else I may be doing, I’m
also grading. There, I’ve said it.
And what else? Ah, the seasonal job of carrying water to the thirsty plants. Much of it is accomplished by standing still with a pointed hose. But some of it is significantly more taxing. I am reminded of the resentful kids of Monet, the artist.
They complained that their childhood was lost to watering his expansive gardens. My plots aren’t one hundredth as vast, but they
stretch far and wide so that even multiple extensions to the hose wont do. And so
I carry the watering can. Back and forth. To keep the flowers satisfied.
It’s an evening task and one
that, honestly -- I sort of like. At least now, in the early stages of the growing season.
Then, tonight, a special return to town – for a Mother’s Day
meal at Graze. This is the city trip I’m always happy to make: for a meal with the terrific younger set.
My littlest one is, of course, in Chicago, but in spirit she
is there too. And since it's "Mother's Day," I am left to open boxes. (These days, insofar as I am at all decently dressed, it is because they attend to me in this way. What I am wearing for example is, from head to toe, their doing -- from a recent birthday.)
At the end of it all, Rosie transports me home. Past a sun that set over
the fields, past deer that always come out when I ride at their hour of play.
A beautiful evening. You could not hope for a better one.
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