Kate

Samhain                           Waning Dark Moon

Kate rested today and has gained back much of the psychic ground she gave up a couple of days ago.  This  up and down cycle comes with the territory.

Tonight she comforted Jon and Jen.  Little Gabe pulled a scary stunt, not uncommon, but terrifying.  While crying, he held his breath, turned blue and began to have small tremors.  Kate says it happens sometimes between 18 months and 3 years, not much beyond 5.  It’s good to have Grandma the pediatrician around for those scary moments.

Timeless Masterpiece Liked

Samhain                               Waning Dark Moon

“Finish each day and be done with it. You have done what you could.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

It never occurred to me just how much Emerson and Brad Childress have in common.  The Vikings are always getting ready for this Sunday, not thinking about last Sunday or the Sunday after this one.  This is the only game that counts right now.  This one.  Quarterbacks especially, but all others, too, must have short memories so bad plays won’t affect their next play.  Which is the only play that counts.  Of course, encephalopathy from hitting large, fast moving objects also helps.

Perhaps Eckhart Tolle has an NFL consulting career ahead of him and a new book:  This Game is the Only Game-Play Here Now.

Scientists Dissect Coworker To Find Out More About Scientists Fri, Nov 06 2009 This important segment and the following article:   Timeless Masterpiece Liked are on the Onion website.

Garden Crusader

Samhain                               Waning Dark Moon

Welcome to another sunny, warm November day.  These are days I’ve come to expect from October, but, as Paul Douglas often says, nature tries to balance, so here we are close to Armistice Day with a 60 degree and bright day about to unfold.  That means time to finish what I hope will be the last Rigel barrier of the season, extending a wire across the top of our wooden orchard fencing to make it really, really hard for her to get a purchase.

Kate’s lying low for the next few days, taking care of that not yet healed back.  A wise decision on her part.  She’s most at risk just as she begins to feel better, chasing down dogs, picking up the mail down our sloped driveway, loading and unloading the dishwasher, making Danish pancakes.  These are all part of the routine of a normal  life, not important, perhaps even a bit annoying on a daily basis, until you cannot do them at all, then they loom large as important, even critical parts of identity.

A shout out here to Vicki Nowicki.  I met Vicki at the annual Seed Saver’s Exchange conference in July.  I ate dinner with Vicki and her husband.  We talked about permaculture, Celtic holidays, the odditys of American landscape preferences and the importance of becoming native to a place.   Vicki told me she’d won a Garden Crusader award from Gardener’s Supply Company.  The notice came today in a e-mail from them.  I’ve excerpted a bit from the interview with her.

When we spoke, and as I read this, I found myself speaking when she talked.  We were in synch.  She also has a Liberty Garden project that I admire.

2009 Garden Crusader Vicki Nowicki

Vicki’s life work has been to help people slow down, learn about the land they live on and take better care of it. “What I’ve been trying to do for 30 years is to glorify the place where you live,” she said. “I want to use food gardens to nail people down to their place. A garden helps to reveal the nature of your site and bonds you to the land,” she said. “When you have a garden instead of a lawn, you are now producing something, not just consuming at the maw.”7150-nowicki-bench

Liberty Gardens

Her newest project pulls together everything she knows and believes about gardening. It is a website called libertygardens.com. The site will include tutorials and garden journals and will be a resource for anyone interested in gardening.

Here is how she describes it:

“It’s for the 21st century and it’s about growing food at home in order to make it a home. Our lives will change and our world will change when we start to plant food gardens at home. It’s a simple act that each person can choose to do at any time without a new law being passed, or a feasibility study being run or a stimulus package being doled out. But talk about a shovel-ready project! If our land is worth caring about and if our families are worth caring about, we can each choose to create the food supply that we have been asking for. We have the liberty to choose what to grow and how to grow it. People have always done it.”

And with Vicki Nowicki’s help, more and more people will be joining in, and doing it too.