Thursday, July 9, 2009

Sumer is icumen in, Lhude sing!!

The tomatoes are in! Yay! Here's a picture of my weekly box of CSA vegies, picked up this morning at the farm. I'm cooking Curried Squash Soup now, a double recipe. If the tomatoes are in, can the beans be far behind?

PS--CSA=Community Supported Agriculture. You pay a set amount at the beginning of the season, and you get a 1/2 bushel box of whatever is harvested that week (or every other week, if you choose). My CSA is with the Center for Living and Learning, about 4 miles down the road, between here and Leiper's Fork.

Shedding time

When I walk the dog around the yard in the morning or afternoon, I like to have my camera handy. It helps me pay attention to what I see, so that I really see it. For a few moments, I forget all else except what's right in front of me. Today I zeroed in on the Sycamore tree in the SW corner of the 3-acre lot. It's in the process of shedding bark, an annual event. The ground at the base of this tree is littered with thin strips of discarded bark. Aren't the layers and colors wonderful?

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Chimney Repair

Chimney repair began this morning, early. Two young men are sawing out the damaged bricks and mortar, then replacing them. While this guy was checking his text messages, his partner was in the driveway, mixing Portland and sand with water on a piece of plywood. The mix looked like a thick pudding being stirred with a trowel. He handed it up in what looked like an oversized pastry bag. If the rain holds off for a few hours, they may finish the job today. The white tarp is covering the temporary wooden frame protecting our new (December) heat pump. R. is outside, hovering from a distance, doing odd jobs in the yard. He just cut down the Japanese Maple that the drought killed a year or two ago. Even though we haven't seen leaves on the little tree in almost two years, there's a huge empty space there now.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Sally's Room








In the book, Sally's Room, by Mary K. Brown, Sally discovers that when her room in empty, she can “dance in here.” That’s how I felt after R. and I removed everything but the furniture from my very cramped study. After the skies dumped 16+ inches of rain on us in 6 weeks (April-May), I found mold growing in the southwest corner and knew we had to get my books and files out of there quickly. It took an entire weekend of backbreaking work to do this, but now I can sleep at night, assured that I will not wake up to find fuzz growing on Mary Oliver’s poetry or my genealogy records. Or my CDs, art supplies, etc. (Although I doubt that Mary Oliver would be offended. She’d probably write a poem about the fungi reclaiming her words.) We’re still waiting for the repairs to begin on our chimney and roof before the contractor can even think about making the room livable again. In the meantime, I’m looking at the almost empty room and wondering if I can bear to pitch about half of my stuff so I can actually have some floor space. Maybe to dance in. Or maybe even room to sew or make art. Maybe I’ll redo the closets so I can move the filing cabinets inside. Maybe I’ll move the bookshelves. I’ve already taken four or five bags of clothing to Goodwill, but, alas, only one box of books. Everything else is stuffed into one end of the living room. I plan to be very selective when I put things back, but will I have the courage to cull enough stuff so that I can make art? Dance?

Friday, May 22, 2009

Resting
















When I returned home yesterday, R. motioned for me to look out the kitchen window at the birdbath. On the left is what I saw. I wonder if this is the same guy I took a picture of last summer, curled up in almost the same spot. That picture is on the right.


Lying down beside
Our birdbath, the yearling buck--
Velvet antler stubs.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Like an inchworm


I don't know that I've ever gotten a new blouse after finding an inchworm crawling on it, but it was fun to imagine that the worm was measuring for one. Maybe that old wives' tale was created to teach children to be kind to harmless creatures. All I know is that I've never killed one--at least not on purpose--but have always taken great care when removing them from my clothing. Today, while watching the roofer measure and diagram our roof, it suddenly struck me how much like an inchworm he looked, walking so carefully along that steep peak, above the chimney, almost even with the tree tops. Like the inchworm, will he soon give us a new one?