her able hands

in the garden, in the kitchen and on the page

Archive for May, 2007


New Kid On The Block

My friend Debra started a blog and I’m so thrilled that she’s adding her unique and thoughtful voice to the blogosphere. She and her husband Steve own the brick and mortar Elements Gallery in the struggling arts community of Peninsula, Ohio. Steve’s pottery is just incredible and Debra does beautiful, ethereal, hand-built tiles.

She’s writing about the potter’s life, the creative life, at the growing site From Skilled Hands—please go welcome her to her new online home. It’ll make me happy. It’s my birthday, so you should all want to make me happy, no?

Garden of Reason

I’m amazed by how much I can accomplish when I have time, energy, focus and someone else to run interference with the kids. My intention yesterday was to leave work at 4:00 because I worked through lunch, but somehow I still ended up shutting the computer down at 5:00.

Driving home with the windows open, I sail through pockets of Lilac fragrance so intense, it’s as if I’m driving through a boudoir moments after a proper lady sprayed her atomizer. Beautiful. Lilac bloom almost always coincides with my birthday and mother’s day and is my favorite flower scent by far. I would like to plant a Lilac hedge along the open area of the back yard between our plot and the development behind us, leaving an opening for the kids to dash through, of course.

At home, Fatou (the girl who lives out back) joins us on the deck for potato chips and dip, apple slices and juice. Then I set the girls up with chalk, sponges and buckets of water in front of the chalk board. I sort through seeds at the picnic table until Chris gets home from his guitar lesson. I notice that the air smells exactly the way it did the week we moved in, it feels right, I feel connected. I look up and see Fatou’s mother and grandmother making their way across the grass with the bowls and the soup pot from the weekend meal I made for their family to welcome the new baby girl.

Inside one bowl is a steaming mound of Japanese sticky rice, in the pot a thick stew of beef and vegetable curry. It smells incredible and I try not to tear up, but my gratitude is so thick, it chokes me. I have just been sitting with my seeds and wondering if I can get away with not feeding my family a real dinner so I can plant. I tell them, “This is too much. Thank you, you have given me my evening.”

Chris pulls the girls around the yard in the wagon, their screams sound just like my own summers as a child at Lincoln Park, riding the kiddie roller coaster, screeching my curly head off, my face splitting in a smile of joy and terror so wide I can hardly keep it with me.

At least one month late, I get ready to plant, hoping that the partial shade will give the greens half a chance.

getting ready to plant the salad beds

As I pull the soil back with my trowel, then sprinkle seed with my thumb and forefinger, my mind slips away from the task and begins to chew on the problem of research and how to do it. I want to write more about the food supply and how big agribusiness is making the world and its people sick, driving out small farms and destroying what little food security local systems might be able to provide in an emergency. My little seeds are my personal rebellion against the tide, but the tidal wave is building and we the people, we have to do something to stop it. I think my first step is reading. My second step is talking to people who are in it, living with the system affecting their livelihoods. Then writing. But who, what, where? When? There’s so little time.

Someone said to me recently, “So if you don’t have enough time to do what’s important to you, quit your job.” Fair enough. But not very practical, at least until we don’t have two mortgages. Someone else said, “So free up your free time, skip the garden this year.” Not a chance. I can’t imagine a life without a garden. Wait, that’s not entirely true. I can imagine, I can remember a life without a garden. I remember four years living in a fourth-floor walk-up overlooking acres of onion fields and the closest thing I had to a garden was the Philodendron plant that snaked a full circle around the wall like a border. I ached to get out there and stick my hands in the black dirt.

planting the salad beds

But I also ache to get out there and stick my hands in the bigger story, to learn how to listen. My little piece of it? That’s my reflection. I’m ready to hold that up to the giant mirror of the world, I just need to figure out where to begin. Do I head down to the farmer’s market and start with a single question, then stop telling my story, just listen? Most of the people set up down there are part-time farmer/gardeners, not quite hobbyists, but not full-scale either. I’m thinking back to my past conversations with the folks down there, and realizing that I seldom listened, that I yammered on about my own bla, bla, bla. Here I am! This is me! Isn’t it grand?!

me planting the salad beds

It dawned on me that I may never move beyond writing this blog if I don’t practice closing my mouth and opening my ears and mind. I re-read some essays I’ve written and can see why the rejection slips piled up—they’re too ego-centric. They lack connection to the world. They are only framed within the space of my own heart and mind. The language might work, but a diary is useful to others probably only after the author is dead and gone.

I finish tamping down the soil on the last row of seeds and add the notations to my sketch. If they germinate, the effect will be one of alternating stripes and blocks, with colors ranging from pale to dark green, pink to red.

    Fennel
    Arugula
    Merlot Lettuce
    Oak Leaf Lettuce
    Rouge D’hiver Lettuce
    Giant Thick Leaf Spinach
    Pink Chard
    Viroflay Spinach
    Broccoli Raab
    Full-Heart Batavian Endive
    Mesclun
    Something Something Du Diable Lettuce
    Lolla Rosa Lettuce
    Nero De Toscana Kale
    Bloomsdale Spinach

Here on my lower back, a Cherokee tattoo artist inked a continuous wave, a reminder to myself to stay in the flow of life. I wish I had put it on my hand so I could see it every day.

continuous wave tattoo

Life sure does flow with its own tide, a constantly shifting, wave-building tide. So good to stop struggling to swim against it, instead sinking back with lungs full of air and letting it carry me to wherever I should be going.

watering the salad beds

Still, I’ll hope for rain.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

He’s Already Used Up At Least Nine Of Them

I forgot to give an update on my father in-law, the man who has more lives than even the most resilient, jumping from the 12th floor window cat. He’s home and right back to normal (which is sick, and dying, but whatever happened to him didn’t seem to bring him much closer to that death).

The doctors thought stroke because he was completely paralyzed on the left side. He came awake when the EMTs tried to move him, so the coma thing was either not true or short-lived. At the hospital they could find no sign of stroke. None. He came home the next day, under his own mobility. He says he did not see the light. The best they can figure is he somehow cut off his circulation by sleeping on his left side for too long. The fact that seven people were unable to wake him up? A mystery.

I’m completely selfish for being relieved that we won’t have to cancel my birthday bash in order to have a funeral.

What a Load of Horse Sh*t*

Look at what I get to play in today!

3 tons of aged horse manure

I ran home at lunchtime yesterday to pay the guy from the horse farm. He interrupted what sounded like an incredibly busy day, to load up ten scoops of aged horse manure in his hydraulic lift trailer. I ordered five scoops each of five year-old and three year-old manure, mixed. It was so heavy after the rains of last week, that his lift stopped about halfway up and wouldn’t budge. He had to drive forward on the lawn and then backwards and slam on the brakes several times to get the load to shift. When it tumbled out onto the grass, it glinted with wet, wriggling strands of red. Thousands of red worms. I plan to dig a bunch of them out of the pile and put them in a bin under the rabbit’s cage.

I’ve been wanting to try vermicomposting for years and find a better way to utilize the millions of dry pellets Charles the Female Rabbit litters the cage and its surrounding area with. Now I have no excuse, the worms are just hanging out there in the pile waiting for something exciting to do! What could be more exciting than eating ones way through a bucket of rabbit crap and soiled straw to make black gold? Nothing, I tell you. Though, I’m glad I don’t have to do it.

So isn’t the pile just gorgeous? He said it weighed about 3 tons (which explains the torn up lawn that I later had to explain to Chris). So today’s plan is to use the manure to:

  • Mulch Asparagus beds
  • Side-dress and work into the soil for the Potatoes and Raspberries
  • Build lasagna beds inside my hinged wood frames for quick and dirty cold frames to plant lettuces and spinach.

The weather forecast changed. I could see that by looking out the window, of course, but checked online anyway, and sure enough, the sunny, clear and 68* is now mostly cloudy with a 40% chance of rain for the day. Oh well.

Tomorrow’s a whole ‘nother day, but I’m not going to look that far ahead yet. I’m toying with the idea of taking the dining room chairs outside to strip them. I picked up my special-order fabric from Jo-Ann’s yesterday, and I’d love to get them done before the end of the month. If I do, I’ll post a photo of the fabric. I’m in love, and can’t wait to paint the dining room and kitchen to complement it, I’m thinking a dusty gray-sage.

Oh, also? Check out my next column at 100Hats, about eating local. I have so much more I want to write about food supply and local economies, health and security, but this is about all I could squeeze into a 500 word column. Don’t you hate when you write something and then read it a few weeks later and realize you could have said so much more with so many less words? Me too.

*I have to watch my language on this blog now or I can’t check it at work because of blocks they put on internet use with banned words. Also, I’m trying to clean up my act around here, but old habits die hard. It’s a B*tch.

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

The Next Generation

My friend Lisa’s son, Cody is an activist. He’s 15 years-old and has embraced social activism in ways that I have only given random, fleeting thought to, and have never, ever acted upon. I’m too chicken. Too busy. Too lazy. Too complacent. Too in my own head.

But Cody is not. He’s diving in and trying to change the tide, and right now he could use a little help so he can spread his much-needed help around. Right now he’s scrambling to make some money for:

a service learning trip where we will help more than 1,000 local refugees from Haiti and the Dominican Republic. They are currently situated on government property called Batey Libertad which is a community composed of families, individuals, and groups (www.bateylibertad.org). The projects I would be involved in would include: building a house, reforestation, clearing land for eventual creation of a community garden, and working with local women on their candle-making enterprise. The group is staying for 2 weeks (15-29th of June). I would be one of 12 students from the State of Illinois, working with the University of Illinois’ Center for Global Studies, and 1 of 2 students from Urbana High School. The group will come together as one to provide these crucial services.

Please pop on over to Wordy Diva to read the rest of Cody’s wonderful letter of intent, and if you can, make a donation. I’m headed over to do just that as soon as I hit post. It sounds like every penny will make a difference. Then I’m going to send my soon-to-be 15 year-old son out to Urbana to hang out with Cody. He seems like a good influence.