Posts Tagged ‘Family’

14
Mar

Mud Season

   Posted by: Mikko    in Maple Syrup

entryway

Mud Season has arrived! The sun is out and melting anything white and pretty in sight (except for me, of course.) See all the little specks on the carpet? That is sawdust from the mighty fallen soldiers strewn about the yard. Living in a field of wood chips and sawdust is a lot like getting sand in everything when you live at the beach — we’re finding sawdust just about everywhere. Good news is you can’t really feel it between the sheets.

Ew. You people are gross. Of course this is why I love you.

mapleup

Yes, last weekend we got a GLORIOUS hiatus from the depths of winter and it was like throwing our sanity a life raft. After we danced about naked in the driveway for a while (not true) and drove around town with the sunroof and windows down blaring U2’s “Streets Have No Name” (true), we got down to business.

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First, there were trees to tap.

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Thanks to Brian’s brother Joe and his wife Annie, we were able to place about 40 taps. (Because some trees are large enough to take 2 taps, I count taps, not trees.) This past winter we had scored about 50 maple collection buckets with taps and hooks from Craigslist. After disinfecting them with boiling water, the trees were drilled and the taps placed. This was WAY easier than last year when we were sticking homemade taps in and then rigging them to plastic tubing that lead to water carboys. After one day, some buckets were already 1/3rd full. This week Dad added another 20 taps.

Then, winter slapped us across the face again and the trees stopped flowing. We’re going to inaugurate the boil this weekend.

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After tapping trees, we then spent the rest of the afternoon clearing tree debris from the yard. Now, instead of 4 years to get a clear yard it’s only going to take us something like … 3 3/4 years.

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To tell you the truth I absolutely loved it. While Brian, Joe and Annie were charged with burning brush, I was making piles of limbs to be chipped Fargo style. I was having a grand ole time sawing off branches and feeling like the Discovery Channel’s “Ax Men” was going to invite me for an audition any day now.

Then this happened…

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lichen2

Ok, so I got shiny* and went on a little photo shoot of the lichen on the felled pine trees. Some people take a smoke break … I shine light on the beauty that surrounds us. Call it a vice.

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All told, we worked for 3 hours straight (minus water and art breaks) and the lawn barely looks different. I couldn’t help but smile thinking of my former life in NYC and what I would have been doing on a warm spring weekend: shopping the farmer’s markets for treats that other people produced and wandering around the city for exercise. Now look at me getting all buff in the fresh air as I build my farm by hand. I wonder how all my city friends are doing…

joesfire

Now taking reservations for The Accidental Farm’s BadAss Country Livin Boot Camp!

*”Shiny” is a term coined by my very focused husband. It refers to my ability to get easily distracted and was inspired by a snorkeling trip. We would be swimming together, something would catch my eye and I would disappear, indubitably saying, “Ooooh, shiny!” My entire family is afflicted with Shiny Syndrome which now, come to think of it, might be part of the reason we have earned the name The Accidental Farm.

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9
Feb

In Search Of Warmth

   Posted by: Mikko    in The Farm

coldpeacock

Lately I’ve been feeling a lot like the peacock… someone from an exotic land struggling to make it through the harsh reality of the cold; minute by minute, day by day. Much like the peacock (I suspect, anyway) I was born here, and though I feel as if I have been transplanted from some warmer time and place, this is all I really know, and this is where I’ll stay.

swingsetperch

The cold has been relentless. Days maxing out at temperatures in the high twenties, nights dipping dangerously low into the single digits, and for weeks on end. I wander about the house, cranky, layered in 4 and 5 shirts, plotting my escape… any escape. Then, I take a step onto the back porch and remember that some have it worse, like Rocky. He is the rain barrel fish that we rescued back in November. There he is, alone, at the bottom of an almost completely frozen bucket of water, waiting the return of warmer weather. On days when I fear that the bucket has frozen solid, I set it inside the kitchen to thaw a bit. Then, when the ice begins to float, I give the bucket a shake and watch him jump, life streaming through his little body if only for a second. Before he thaws completely, I return him to the arctic back porch to live out the rest of his hibernation.

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Today, however, today was a special day. We had all been talking about it for a week. Today the temperature reached into the 40’s. Words like ‘warm’, ’spring like’ and ‘balmy’ were bantered about. Blankets were hung on the line, Ice was chipped off of the driveway, and the fireplace took a day of rest.

Today was a special day for other reasons. Today was the day that I bought my bees.

metalbee

You may recall a few posts back that Brian had stumbled upon a family that was moving to Italy and needed to sell their Italian honeybees. Well, today was the day that I drove out to check out the equipment, visit the bees and determine whether or not the purchase was to be made.

Truth be told, the decision had already been made. The class had been taken, the club had been joined and the books had been purchased. And if there was any doubt after all of that, the other night I watched the movie, “The Secret Life Of Bees”. I was in love hook, line and stinger. (I know, that’s bad.)

This morning, buoyed by thoughts of a sunnier time, I prepared to meet the current owners of the bees. It was only in retrospect, as I was driving the hour between our farms, that I realized lathering myself in my new Caribbean scented lotion, though deliciously reminiscent of the sun, was perhaps an error in judgement as I was about to greet my new stinging and swarming associates.

I met Andy and Heather and tried hard to listen as they explained what equipment they were selling and how last year’s season went, all the while trying to stifle my excitement to just greet the bees. Despite the fact that it was still winter, the warmth of the day was a good indicator that they might be a tad bit lively and viewable. I expected the bees to be like my daughters when they have woken up from a nap; confused, wobbly and shy, if not cranky.

After learning about the endeavor that I was about to undertake (including the fact that last year’s harvest — their first and only harvest — brought in 90 pounds of honey!), we trucked through 1 1/2 foot snow coverage to the hive. The hive consists of 2 deep wooden boxes (brood boxes) where the bees spent all summer building up stores of honey to survive the winter. On top of the boxes is a feeder box filled with sugar water. This additional food is to assist the bees when the honey stores get low in the late fall and early spring, before the pollen is available once again.

Andy popped the top off of the hive and anxiously we all looked in.

Dead bees. That is what we saw. Bees that looked as if someone had shouted, “Pencils down!” and they were still madly circling ‘c’ in the multiple choice section. Dead in their tracks.

I don’t have pictures because I didn’t want to weird out Andy and Heather. It is probably better this way anyway. It was a pretty sad sight.

Since this was the top box, and there was still a box underneath, we contemplated taking the top box off to check to see if there were alive bees at the bottom. I put my ear on the top box and listened with all of my might.

(Funny, it didn’t occur to me, until later anyway, that I was not only sticking my ear into a box of dead bees, but that I was also sticking my ear into what was potentially a box that still had ALIVE bees in it. And people wonder why we call ourselves The Accidental Farm.)

I thought that I heard a very faint hum, but with the wind almost howling around us, it was too difficult to be sure. Nervous that something dreadful was happening in their hive, Andy and Heather began to unwrap the insolation jacket and take off the top box. Unfortunately it was frozen to the bottom and without tools there was no way to look inside. Not wanting to create a problem by exposing the tiny creatures that might still be hunkered down for warmth, we decided to leave them alone.

At the time, I was sure that the bees were alright, just buried at the bottom for warmth. Now, while writing this blog and looking at pictures of dead bees, I wonder if I might be wrong. I’m alright with the fact that I might not inherit Andy and Heather’s bees, just the equipment. However I’m not alright with the fact that a society might be gone, one that two people grew to love in less than a year. And in the end, there is no way to know what in fact went wrong or how to prevent it from happening again.

But, I suppose this is a fact of farming. Farming is about working within the cycle of life. Clearly the point is to try your best to help life thrive, but if you’re working with life then you have to accept death. And just as we have to accept the frozen face of winter, it is not forever and there are moments when we can turn ourselves to the sun and remember that life will return once again.

suncatching

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24
Jan

Making Tracks

   Posted by: Mikko    in The Farm

The guinea hens decided to fly 40 feet up into the trees and yell at us.
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And HeyZeus and The Ladies ventured out to get some sun.
crowdedstrawberrypatch
(Last year Brian and I built a raised bed strawberry patch here because it gets perfect sun and the garage acts as a berm against the wind. Perfect for strawberries… and cold birds that like to dig into the dirt and bury themselves. Oh well. Store bought strawberries again this year.)

Parker and I decided to take a walk and investigate tracks in the snow.

rabbittracks
Rabbit tracks?

Around the tree line of our property is a steady stream of tracks. Deer and coyote blaze a trail that weaves through the decrepit trees, but stays carefully beyond the boundaries of what would be too close to us (and our dog). Looking at these tracks made these creatures more real to me somehow. I know that these animals are out there. I’ve seen them from time to time in broad daylight. But seeing tracks in the snow, tracks worn into paths, reminds me that they live here and that there is a world within my world that I have no sense of. Or had no sense of… that is, until now.

Ever since leaving the city, I feel that I am waking up to more of the life that is going on around me. Things that were a part of me as a child, but as I grew older, I paid less attention to or determined that they were childish and did not matter. Like animals that wander at night outside of my windows.

Here is are the tracks of a brazen coyote as he crosses the open field into our driveway:
coyotetracks

If you’ve spent any time at The Accidental Farm, it is not long before you are introduced to the many strange characters that live amongst us: guinea fowl, Polish hens, a peacock … and the hidden folk. You can’t possibly live in the company of 3 little girls and not believe that fairies, elves, nymphs, sprites and other entities are a part of our farm.

checkingyouout

My daughter told me the other day, as we were reading through Faeries by Brian Froud, that she did not believe in spriggans (devilish little thieves that steal children and blight crops) because she has never seen one. I asked her if she believed in fairies and mermaids and I received an emphatic, “Yes! I’ve seen THEM!”

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I’ve never seen a Spriggan or a mermaid… at least that I can remember. I did see something tiny and white fly out of a tree last spring while walking with my brother and he insists that it is a tree seed that looks exactly like a fairy but can never remember (or find) the name of the seed or the tree.

I think about what it is like to be my daughter and believe with all of my heart in a world that most people cannot fathom. I wonder if she realizes that most of the grown ups she talks to don’t see what she sees and wish that they could believe as she believes. What exactly is *REAL* when you are five years old? What exactly is *REAL* when you are almost 38?

Buddhistpeacock

I’ve only ever seen pictures of the Dalai Lama in books and on T.V., but I’m pretty sure that he’s real.

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