Tuesday, November 18, 2008

What Meets the Eye


It's been quite the busy week since I last posted. On Friday, Helen and her three wonderful daughters - Meredith, Abby and Serena - picked me up and we drove to the Amish store she wanted to visit. Unfortunately we got lost, but maybe it was a blessing in disguise. We ended up first at Ben Zook's house, where she got directions from his son, who was out chasing a herd of beautiful horses. Mr Zook is a farrier and I am dreaming of owning one particular bright bay that was out in the field! We still got lost, so we then stopped at Helen's friend Candy's house. She was going to the store too, so we made a little caravan of cars and kids. Before we left we stopped to admire the herd of dairy goats her eldest daughter Veronica tended and the dozens and dozens of birds...chickens...ducks...and a 50 pound turkey, according to one of her boys. I was having the time of my life, especially when four kittens popped off the porch and demanded some pets!

We finally found the Amish farmstead. The store was in an old house. No sign, nothing to indicate it was a store. An elderly lady named Gertrude tended the store. It was dark and cold since there was no electricity. It was like stepping back in time. Racks and shelves of goods in all the rooms of the house and the old farm kitchen turned into an herbalist shop and baking center. Everyone shopped and bought great things...new boots for the girls, herbal medicines, and toys for the children. Gertrude and Helen even tried to trace their family trees to see how they were related!

As I stood outside the plain white house while waiting for the others to join us by the cars, I couldn't help but remember my times in Manhattan. Just like this plain white farmhouse, what met the eye on the outside was never like what was inside. Here I stood before an old farmhouse that if I drove past I would never know was a store. Plain on the outside, inside brimming with an Aladdin's cave of farm treasures. In Manhattan, I would often walk past plain gray and concrete skyscrapers, then an occassion would arise when I'd have a meeting or appointment in one. I remember stepping into one building in particular on West 23rd street and just stopping to stare at the art deco friezes lining the walls. I must have had a peculiar look on my face because a security guard approached me. "Are you all right? Can I help you?" "I'm just admiring this gorgeous artwork. They don't make buildings like this anymore." He looked at me like I was crazy. But who crafts bronze friezes of mythology anymore? Here I was starting at Hercules and the Lion, Pegasus, the three graces, and the months of the year in stylized 1920's beauty....and white marble floors and walls in the lobby, richly veined in charcoal gray.....

What meets the eye is rarely what is on the inside. How true this is of buildings, and of people. Many people look like those buildings, like the farmhouse and the skyscraper; plain on the outside but containing a treasure of wisdom and beauty inside.

*****

The shed update! Shed is almost done. I've posted a photo here. John is up on the roof hammering in shingles. We filledl two and a half more beds with compost and soil on Sunday. I'm still sick from the spider bites I got on Friday, but it's okay. It will get better. Darned thing was in my towel in the bathroom. I never saw him but he sure made his presence known. I always get so sick from spider bites!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Wintering Over Plants

Jack asked me today about taking in the geraniums to winter over. I'm running out of room in the little morning room or Florida room . I don't want anymore plants on the windowsills either. I'm also nervous about bringing miscellaneous bugs, like black widow spiders, in on the plants. There are so many of them out here - on the lights by the garage, running across the lawn. I'm never wearing sandals outside, I'll say that for sure! Yet I do want to winter over those geraniums. I suggested the lights in the basement, the plant lightstand that John made for me. I also asked John about helping me make a plant table. I hope that will be easy. I think it will be. We'll use leftover tile from the house and scrap lumber. Yet another winter project for the gardener.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The Little Foxes

Yesterday morning I finished walking Shadow and took my coffee into the little morning room at the back of the house. I love to curl up there for a bit before my workday begins, sipping coffee and enjoying the bright sunshine and my beloved plants. I sat down and gazed out across the garden area towards the autumn landscape. A flash of red streaked through the raised beds. To my astonishment, not one but two red foxes raced across the frost bitten grass. One was slightly larger, the other a bit smaller and thinner. I followed their progress across the fields. They raced up the mound of black compost, stopped to mark the pile, then began playing tag. One would race around the pile, peek over the top, then flick his tail to encourage the other to chase. Around and around they raced, playing, dashing, leaping. I got the camera but couldn't get a good shot through the windows - the sun glare was too strong. After watching their antics for ten minutes, I tried to sneak outside to snap a photo, but by the time I got around the corner of the house they'd vanished back into the woods. John heard foxes in the woods from where my two entered the field. Do we have a den of reds? Our neighbors tell us reds are rare here - it's all gray foxes. I am always thrilled when I see my beloved red foxes!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Vegetable Garden Takes Shape




After a weekend hauling ten foot trusses up to the top of the new shed (or barn as we've started to call it) and straining to hold enormous pieces of particle board for John to nail onto the roof I have newfound respect for the men who built this house. Three days of backbreaking labor later, we have a roof on the shed and a window in place. Just in time, too, since today the rains came. We've also been hauling wheelbarrow after wheelbarrow of compost into the newly completed raised beds, and I've been researching victory garden seeds as well as new fruit varieties to plant. John's mentioned the chicken house too, so (fingers crossed!) that may be one of the next projects. In the meantime, I collected buckets of seeds this weekend, and when the garden dries out again I'll be back in the perennial garden picking seeds for next year. Enjoy the photos!