Ode to Acorn Squash

Today I wandered around and kicked up hills in the sand and dirt and planted acorn squash and pumpkin.  I thought it would be fun to see all these plants just roaming whereever they want to go.  In my small garden in Rapid City I had to contain and train and cajole them to stay put.  One year I had a pumpkin plant that took over nearly the whole garden.

I am experimenting with different things.  In one spot I tried a “trench garden” where you dig a three foot deep trench, fill it with trash paper and cardboard, and the fill it in and plant on top of it.  In another spot I tried bag gardening–bags of topsoil with the tops cut off and the seed sewn right into the bag.  It is supposed to be a good way to start a first year garden.  I only put greens and cilantro in those.  Maybe I’ll call my pumpkin and squash garden “Free range squash.”  I still have two grapevines to put in and then I need to replace my tomatoes and cukes.  I also created a “Tool Tipi” today.  That was fun–two trashy looking closet doors destined for the dump came together to provide a shelter for my rakes and shovels.  It actually looks kind of cool.  I stapled a rice bag over the top to give it a little more water protection.

The sun shone.  The ticks roamed.  The mosquitos smiled.  And it was a wonderful few hours under the newly blue sky. There is just something about working with dirt and sand and my own trash pile that makes me happy.   And then I ended the day with my second belly dancing class.  My sister and two pretty nieces are all taking belly dancing lessons.  They are one session ahead of me but I can shimmy with the best of them.  I am not sure if my right hip aggrees, but that is what happens when a 55 year old woman shimmys.

Next week we fly to New York City to work with a “film doctor”.  Fernanda is going to spend a day asking us questions about Video Letters From Prison and helping us to hear our own answers.  No mystery as to why we chose her to work with!  Gaydell–thanks for signing on.  I miss you!  When I figure this straw bale thing out I still may come and plant one on your land.  Tell those other bear lodge eaters to sign on, too.

I’ll keep you posted,

Jamie

Falling

Yesterday we put the garden to bed for the winter.  I wasn’t sure if some of the plants agreed or not.  The peppers and green beans were still putting on fragile white blooms, wanting more from life than the season’s end will allow.  And today I found out that a cousin passed away-again probably wanting more from life than the season’s end will allow. 

Fall is a strange time of year for me.  I get reflective, depressed, and energized all at the same time.  What do I want to do before season’s end?  I am trying very hard to withdraw my energy from the college.  I begin, as usual, to care too much and want too much and do too much.  Soon all my other goals have gone to the side, and I am discovering that that is not okay with me.  I want to plant my gardens where things have a good chance of growing. 

Into garden metaphors tonight, I guess.  It is appropriate, however, because we all have the many seasons of our lives.  I have been through the young years, the mothering years, and the dreaming years.   Now I want to live my life savoring each moment.

Milt and I are making plans to do a film on education and the Natural Human Learning Process.  It is an issue that hits close to the bone for both of us.  I just don’t understand how we think we can plot children in stiff little chairs, limit their creative play, and then produce outstanding “citizens”.  I keep thinking back to when we were in Lincoln, NE and I was watching my 7 month old grandson try to get his hand into my big bead box.  I have one of those large plastic containers about three quarters full of beads.  We were at the Taekwondo Tournament with The Bead People.  Adrien’s little mind was entirely focused on how to get to those beads.  Finally I lifted him up and let him put his bare feet in the beads.  It was great-he started paddling as if I had put him in water and when I pulled him back out, there were beads stuck between his toes. 

Learning is fun.  How could we forget that?  Learning is as natural as breathing and eating.  How could we forget that?  I really want us to produce a film that reminds people that we cripple the learning process when we present too much information too fast and in a way that is deadly dull. 

 I’ll keep you “posted”. 

I figured out that to date there are now over 4000 Bead People out wandering the world working their tiny bits of magic on people.  That is so cool.  If you don’t yet have your own, you can go to www.thebeadpeople.org and sign up to spread the word. 

 Jamie Lee

 

The Homestead

Tonight the moon was almost full and shining red through the pines on the bit of earth in Northern Minnesota that we have recently tagged “our land” (although I still doubt that anybody can actually “own” such a thing).  We have been here for one week and the magical flow we discovered from the moment we decided to buy into these twenty acres continues. 

On our way out from Rapid City, SD, Milt and I were coming to terms with the fact that we probably would not have the expertise or resources to actually begin building our strawbale house.  On Tuesday we considered finding a camper or something more substantial than a tent to live in while we prepare our project.  On Wednesday we found two potential old campers, made an offer on one, hooked it to my brother’s truck, and pulled it to our homestead.  It is a 1966 Trailblazer and we bought it for $250.  By Thursday we had cleaned it, repaired some leaks, blocked it, and generally made it livable.  Now, a week later, we are sleeping like babies in our cozy bed and listening to all the night sounds with the breezes blowing across our faces.  Of course, we also do nightly mosquito checks to make sure none of the friendly (hungry) little buggers have followed us in the door.  

They have completely torn up the main street of Cass Lake.  Evidently the town received a major “Miracle” grant and is trying to bring itself back to life.  The main street will now be paved with bricks that, hopefully, will attract new businesses and energy.  I walked around down there today thinking about how busy it was when I went to high school here-two drug stores, three grocery stores, several bars, Two Traders, and the Five and Dime.  Now-not much. 

Not since I graduated from college and moved to SD (in 1977) have I spent this much time here.  I am feeling strange and adrift, as if my main street had been torn up and something new was about to replace it.  I am just not sure what.  Our small 8 x 18 foot trailer requires that we choose carefully what we “want” and then keep it in its right space.  The land makes me breathe more fully in a way that I haven’t in many years.  A few days ago I discovered one of the most beautiful wild blueberry patches I’ve ever seen-and it is right on our land.  The plants are loaded with green berries that begin to blush toward blue.  I go now every day to see how they are progressing and feel confident they will be ripe for me to pick before I have to leave.

All of this is making me feel oddly alive and young.  It makes me wonder what it was I was trying to accomplish-push, push, push.  Sometimes I have tried so hard to be “something” that I just forgot to “be”.

 Now I just want to be.

 So far this is the first writing I have done since we got here.  We were busy carving a small space for ourselves, nudging Mother Nature over just a bit.  Tonight was the first night I felt that peculiar itch I get to put words on paper (or my computer).  I am curious to see if I can find a new rhythm of writing AND being as we are here over the next two weeks.  We did set up to do The Bead People at the annual Rib Fest this weekend so that should be fun.  

 It has also been many years since I have lived close to so many family members again.  They keep popping in and out and bringing many gifts.  When I woke up this morning there was a small round table outside the trailer.  I didn’t see it but evidently my nephew, Ryan, found it at the recycling place and thought we might be able to use it.  He wrote his name with sticks to let us know he had left it.  And then tonight when I returned home from doing some other stuff, there was a bucket of newly-dug raspberry bushes beside my trailer-and a new metal plate replacing the hole in the floor near my front door.  Last night we were ferried over the lake by one brother so we could join another brother on Star Island while he tried out their new Snuba gear.  Snuba is a combination of snorkeling and scuba-a generator on a floating tire, two 40-foot hoses, mouth breathing gear and weights to help you explore the underwater world.  

 So, I am surrounded by gifts both from the earth and from family and friends.  Could it be that as I seek a simpler life, it will get richer in many other ways?  Probably.  I would certainly like to find out. 

What a life.  And by the way, my 24 blueberry plants seem to be thriving and establishing new roots-just like us.  I think it will be hard to leave in two weeks and the only thing I will miss are a few trillion ticks and mosquitoes.

 More on our adventures to follow . . .

 Jamie