Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Tuesday - 102nd

What's the biggest time-suck in the world? Learning how to install/fix/operate something new on your computer. It    can    take    forever.

I can only say this: I'm glad I hadn't scheduled anything important for this afternoon, because I would have had that feeling of total panic as the minutes turned into hours turned into the rest of my day, as I struggled to use another Adobe photo editing program.

I had to do it. My computer is several years old and though I knew I would get into trouble sooner or later, I continued to work on photos imported onto its hard drive. How long would it be before I ran out of space? Oh, right about this long.

Please don't be an Ed and tell me to move everything to a backup device. I don't like them, I forget how to use them. I prefer having everything there, on my own screen, at my fingertips daily. And though all good photos are actually in a cloud storage on Flickr, that place is a complete mess. I have 53,843 edited photos (I've been s Flickr member since 2005), all in one chronological photostream. No order, no labeling, no albums, no organization. You try to find anything there. Can't do it? Ha! Neither can I.

So I opened up my cloud based Light Room, which, after all, is included in my Adobe subscription, and I stumbled. And it took me forever to get past step one, despite a valiant effort to google, search youtube, etc etc to get myself out of a frozen space from which I could not exit.


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Okay, enough computer jabber. After all, it wasn't a complete waste of time: you learn something when you problem solve your way through an issue, but still -- a whole beautiful afternoon to learn one very trivial little detail. Uff!

Otherwise, the day belonged to the grandkids.

After breakfast of course.


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Snowdrop, Sparrow and I cycled through the usual loosely set schedule of activities, but there definitely were some highlights: our nature walk, for example, put us straight into the new orchard, where Ed and I had set up a ladder. It was Snowdrop's first authentic cherry picking experience!


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She learned that not all cherries come without bugs! (But most are beautiful and delicious, even though our harvest isn't huge.)


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Sparrow wanted to pick as well and I let him do it by hoisting him up close to a cherry candidate, but the truth is, the little guy doesn't like cherries, as it's a FRUIT of all horrors, so he held onto it for a while, wondering if he should be happy or indifferent to the experience.


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Eventually, we ate his cherry.

Inside, he wanted to paint, on her side of the easel. For two minutes and then he was done.


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Then she wanted to paint, for one minute, before something else caught her eye.


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There was a music class and thus far, Snowdrop had been good about going along with it (she is my one grandchild who does not absolutely love to sing), but today, she wanted a more active role in the guitar playing...


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... and so of course then he, too, wanted a more active role in the guitar playing.


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Still, it was fun and even though Snowdrop doesn't go around humming songs we sometimes sing here, she does remember them. I got reprimanded for skipping a verse from On Top of Spaghetti -- as song I had last sang several years ago. Too, she is by now quite adept at doing a credible rendition of Home on the Range. Sparrow -- well, he likes music, but is still not fully into the performance aspects of it.


And there you have it: a day that flew by at demonic speed. I could not believe it when I glanced at the clock and saw that it was time for dinner.

And what's there for us this evening? Well, I've got all this kale and so I followed the advice of my CSA farmers and sauteed some garlic scapes, potato onions and kale, threw them into a small baking dish, along with a bit of marinara sauce, crumbled feta on top, and cracked a couple of eggs over it all, and put it into the oven to bake.


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Late evening. Quiet time again. In the summer, it's especially bewitching to bring the quiet of the outdoors into your home.

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Living in the country makes that all too easy.

A stroll, a few minutes with the animals and then it's time to bring out the pop corn and lose yourself in the current fave British crime drama. Completely distracting, delightfully fictional, perfect when watched with with a nice glass of wine and an even bigger glass of fizzy water at the side.


Monday, June 22, 2020

Monday - 101st

This week has four deliveries slated for it: groceries today, asparagus tomorrow, mushrooms and peaches on Wednesday. I'm a little apprehensive about the groceries: it's a wet day. Plenty of clouds, rain, possibly storms.

I am lucky. There is a window of calm in the afternoon. The delivery is made just then. I bring in the groceries and begin the job of washing and sorting. I take out one sack of cherries. Nice. Snowdrop so loves cherries. This will keep her happy all week long. I look in the bag again. Wait, what's this? Another sack of cherries! And another! In all -- eight bags of cherries. Emptied into our big colander, it looks like this:


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It's the first big delivery error since we've been in isolation and of course, we do get a refund (cherries are not cheap, so I am not surprised that 8 bags make up a big chunk of this week's grocery bill). But my oh my do we have the cherries! Is it time to bake??

The day is otherwise wet but beautiful. We have breakfast on the porch...


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(the rooster's song is never ending...)


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... and shortly after, the kids arrive for Gaga's Summer School.

We always begin with a nature walk and the wetness of everything doesn't change my mind. I was thinking I'd talk a little about the trees that grow here. Deciduous and the occasional conifers. But Snowdrop stops me short: Gaga, I know about deciduous trees.
I think back to a book we read a while back about this stuff. Does she remember it? I doubt it. She tells me -- I saw it on Sesame Street!

Sparrow is hesitant out there in the fields of tall, wet grasses, but Snowdrop ventures forward undaunted, to measure herself against a small conifer.


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I watch and I think how good these "nature walks" are for me (and maybe for the kids)! I get to look at the more remote corners of the farmette again and it makes me happy that the kids find some ounce of pleasure there as well.


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Inside, I ask them to paint a tree of choice. Sparrow is indifferent to the assignment, but Snowdrop does one, rejects it as inadequate, tries again. Somewhere in there, in a moment of frustration, she manages to paint her hair green, but who can tell!


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There is so much exuberance in Snowdrop's play today, even as Sparrow is his more steady as a rock self. She dances, he does puzzles.


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And after lunch, she nags me to bring out her "workbooks." She would stick with these a long time, but I'm to get these kids back home in time for Sparrow's nap. Besides, the little guy is too young for these books and it melts your heart to see him wistfully eyeing her materials.


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And then it's late afternoon and I stare at a colander full of cherries.

Ed and I do fit in a bit of yard work in between the gusts of rain. Ed has found an efficient way to set up a "trellis" for growing peas and beans -- a set of poles, a chord between them and strings worked to the ground. We have had a good showing of sweet peas (as in the flower) this year, why not try again to sneak some climbing veggies into our garden? Maybe the cats have scared the bunnies and chipmunks away. Maybe we wont wake up one morning to find all our veggies nibbled down to the ground. And so he pounds in some posts and I prepare the soil underneath.

Dinner. Of leftovers. Followed by some cherries. And an evening stroll to the young orchard, where we discover that some of our trees are doing a modest but okay job at ripening some fruits. Which are the ones that are likely to yield a harvest this week? Why, cherries of course.

You cannot complain about anything when life keeps dumping cherries in your lap!


Sunday, June 21, 2020

Sunday - 100th!

Really? 100 days of isolation/quarantine/stay-at-home/don't-go-anywhere-or-see-anyone-with-the-exception-of-family-cocoon-and-one-dentist? Wow. To the next 100 then!

It's not the only milestone: today marks the sixth anniversary for my younger girl and her husband. Married here, at the farmette, next to this barn...


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Six years! Primrose and Sparrow were nothing but a dream and Snowdrop was slowly growing in her mommy's tummy. A beautiful wedding, a fish fry among farmette fields, a warm day, a lovely day of flowers and rose wines, a partnership solidified with the vow you want to make only once in your lifetime.

And of course, it's Father's Day. May it be a happy day for my sons-in-law and for you, fathers of the world who are challenged with an ever evolving role to play in family life! I hope in all this, despite everything that's going on right now, you all find moments of joy, plenty of laughter and of course -- love.

Here, at the farmette, we are working on fulfilling our gendered roles: he's working on fixing his truck and now, too, on changing a belt on the tractor-mower, while I'm cleaning the farmhouse, doing laundry, ordering the very last delivery of asparagus from our asparagus farmer and probably not the last delivery of mushrooms from the Fungi Farmers, and of course -- cooking dinner. Well, wait. There are flip sides to every coin. I'm also mowing down paths and Ed is "about to clean the stove."

(A breakfast photo: the meal and the people...)


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The thing is, we like this division of labor. Oh, I gripe about house cleaning (who doesn't...), but sliding underneath a rusted truck for hours on end is surely not my idea of fun, while peeling eggs and snipping tails off of shrimp and snapping beans and washing lettuce leaves is.

As for the flower beds -- I'm taking a pause with them today. The gardens are well soaked by yesterday's showers and the weeds are under control. It's a day to admire what's there...

(I do love phlox!)


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(Working hard...)


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(the many shades of green...)


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... and to look forward to the next stage -- the period of lily blooms. (I should give a nod to the first lilies: the delicate yellow ones are popping up already and of course, right at the head of the big lily parade are the tiger lilies, a.k.a. the ditch lilies that I love to hate and Ed has me transplant rather than chuck, so that they are now 99% out of the lily bed, but in about a dozen various locations all over the farmette lands. Like for example here, at the side of the house...)


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And now it is evening and the young family arrives.

(Sparrow's love for the cheepers knows no bounds...)


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(Even when one of them, the indefatigable Peach, pecks a cheese cracker right out of his hand. He's just the right height for a cracker heist! Still, Sparrow is very forgiving...


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(Snowdrop is just ever so slightly amused...)


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Dinner. Salad Nicoise -- my own version of it. For the adults, it's all in the dressing.


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And a family photo. A dad and his bunch.


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Okay, let's rest up and get ready for the next "100 days of solitude." Hey, like the book, only different...


Saturday, June 20, 2020

Saturday - 99th

You try hard not to have negative thoughts or opinions and then something comes your way that hits all your nerve points and you blurt out "hate" and then you feel like you maybe should have toned it down some.

That describes a good part of this morning.

It's a cloudy day and for the first time in a long time I sleep in. The animals are typically fed by 7:30, but this morning, I'm still dozing then and it isn't until 9 that I push myself to get going. I am shocked at the hour. I was that tired.


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Overall, the garden seems weedy to me. This is unfair: there hasn't been much rain. Why the sudden proliferation of weeds? Have I not chipped the beds enough? So before I even get started on breakfast I weed.

(Clematis, climbing the sheep shed)


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It's pleasant enough. The bugs are coming out just a little, but nothing severe. For our first day of summer, it's quite a good weather moment. The garden isn't flowering heavily yet, but there are signs that it's all just around the corner.


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And then Ed comes out to move the old truck out of the driveway and into the concrete slab by the garage so that he can replace the rear spring hangers. There's a lot of rumbling and grumbling and eventually, he comes to me and says -- I can't make it move forward. Backwards -- yes. Forward -- no. Can you help? 
What do you need me to do?
Put it in first, release the clutch and I'll try to see what's going on.

The truck is a pretty gross thing. The body, what's left of it, is all dents and rust. The windshield is cracked in a hundred places. The inside is perhaps worse. I wont post a photo. It will ruin your day. Still, I want to help, so I try to put it in gear and Ed watches from the ground up and everything stinks to high heaven and it still wont move forward.

This is when I say it: Ed, I hate this truck. I will never ever ride in it. It is beyond gross. I don't care if you fix it. It will never be okay in my book.

He knows this of course. Several years ago, when we drove out East in it, I spent one hundred precious dollars to fly back so that I wouldn't have to sit in it for one more minute. It's loud and stinky and it feels like all the insides will tumble out right there in the middle of the highway. Still, if he can fix it, he will. But right now it only drives backwards.

Maybe I could drive it backwards onto the road and turn it around at the intersection then back it up the driveway and toward the garage...
What if it gets stuck on the road?

This is where we pause for breakfast.



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Everything seems more doable and sane after the morning meal and indeed, eventually he figures out what the blockage is and within an hour or so, he has it moving loudly forward, onto the concrete slab where he will conduct more extensive truck surgery for the rest of the day. A great part of me wishes that he will fail and that we'll have to dismember it and carry it out piece by piece each week in a garbage can, but I know Ed's genius for solving complicated problems, so my wish here is little more than an idle dream.


So let's switch to more positive feelings, because there is this greatness to the day.

Take my afternoon on the porch: it has a FaceTime with Primrose! Every week she is that much older, that much more playful and chatty.


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Welcome to summer, little girl!

And speaking of summer, here's something that thrills me: the length of daylight up here, in the northern hemisphere. If I had to pick a favorite one day of the year, it would be this one.  I mean, I do love a number of other seasonal milestones, but summer solstice is at the top of the heap. The lushness of the natural world, the long hours of daylight, the promise delivered.

(view from porch)


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And let's not forget the appearance of so much fresh produce!

[Our CSA box still has tastes of spring. Rhubarb -- oh, no! We already filled two gallon sacks with our own chopped stalks, and loaded it in the freezer for the promise of rhubarb cake everyday this winter! Big fat red lettuces. Okay. Always useful, since we eat salads daily. Garlic scapes -- love them. Yay. And kale, in addition to the rainbow chard. Both? That's a lot of green leaves for one week. Parsley -- I grow my own, but fine, I'll use it. Baby turnips. They say you can eat them raw. Otherwise I'll have to roast them and pretend they're potatoes for a fish night. And here comes summer: Zucchini! Another veggie that I love and Ed is tame about. And the amazing local strawberries. Late spring, no?]

I'm 67 years old and I've yet to find a good way to commemorate this Midsummer's Day. June solstice. In Europe, the important June date is St. John's. But it can be confusing: the talk is of Midsummer, but the merrymaking doesn't track the seasonal shift. The festivities typically take place on the eve of St John's (June 23rd) or on the day itself. Music, bonfires, food. I loved being in the French Catalan provinces then. They add dance to the mix and it's all rather enchanting. So, too, in the Basque region. And I can't begin to give words to the beauty of a late June evening in Scotland, especially on the Isle of Islay.  The sun does a quick exit after midnight, but it never really grows dark and within the hour it's back again, as if to tease you into thinking that the next day of gentle summer is well underway.

But I love summer solstice here, on the farmette as well. We wont have the late night sunset (remember, it's a cloudy day), but can I interest you in an evening rainbow?


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Or in a deer, pausing to acknowledge the uniqueness of this day, this moment?


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So it wasn't a time of music. And food for tonight is slated to be the second half of yesterday's frittata. But in my heart and soul, I know that this is the day that marks the success of the spirit: the dark days seemed interminable, but in fact, they did not last and now here we are, living in the light of the longest day and it is sublime.

Friday, June 19, 2020

Friday - 98th

It's the last day of spring. Everything beautiful about the last three months unfolded here at the farmette, without the horrors of a more violent season. No big storms, no killing frost, no endless rains and horrible mosquitoes. Such an exquisite unfurling of nature's magic, even though it did take place against a drama that brought a lot of disruption and sadness to the lives of so many.

Am I ready for summer? Of course, though I am already looking forward to next year's spring!

Our morning is quick and busy.

Breakfast is on the early side.


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The kids come immediately after and as always we start with a nature walk. Well, nature in name at least, though I do try to spot and admire at least one miraculous little wonder out along the mowed paths or in the meadow fields. It's not hard.


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Inevitably, we walk over to the barn. Snowdrop loves to check the coop for eggs and Sparrow loves a visit with Happy. (The girl is generous with her corn treat for the cheepers!)


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Sparrow wants to hold the discovered egg, but the instruction to hold it gently backfires: his hold is so gentle that twice the egg rolls out of his hand and hits the ground. Strong shell! Nothing breaks.


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Inside the farmhouse, we do short spurts of everything: music, art... (for father's day!)


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And we complete the kite project.
Let's go fly it!
There is no wind outside...

Then let's fly it inside, Gaga. You be the wind!

I am the wind.



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Reading, pretend play...
My girls eat plenty of vegetables! -- Snowdrop proclaims proudly. Her brother acts as if he doesn't understand. (Sparrow has an aversion to anything that grows out of the ground, it seems. Fruits? Vegetables? Bleh. He is in this way the complete opposite of his sister.)


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After a farmhouse lunch, Sparrow returns home for his nap, but Snowdrop stays with me for the afternoon. This is the time to build Legos and do quiet stuff. Her workbooks, which she loves. Big girl stuff. Sometimes with me, sometimes on her own.


Evening. The clouds roll in. I'm glad. The seeds I sowed in the meadow last weekend never got a needed shower. The flowers need water too.

Ed and I take a farmette walk. To the orchard, where small cherries are ripening and delicate flowers are popping up in the meadows...


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Then round the barn and back again. We pause and review patterns of growth so often that this little stroll takes a good half hour. If I weren't hungry for dinner, it would take even longer!


I take out the ingredients for a frittata with broccoli, garlic scapes, a potato and mushrooms. And don't forget the copious amounts of cheese!


June 19th. I tell Ed that I had never really focused on this date before. Having studied and taught Property at an American Law School, I am well aware of the history of slavery and of the very slow granting of rights to African American people in the decades that followed the Civil War, but I did not link any of it to this specific day.
Ed laughs -- You missed school here. You don't have a lot of American culture in your head!
Maybe. But it seems to me that there are many others who haven't paid much attention to June 19th before this year.

It's a time to pause and think a little about what we know and what we probably don't know, but should know about the lives of those around us. Here we are, on this last day of spring, when the garden is quiet, your house is quiet, and no one is asking me to be somewhere or do something at this moment.  So, chop the mushrooms and scapes, stir in the broccoli flowerettes and think.


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With love.