Saturday, August 25, 2012

Huckleberries!

This past week has been filled with gallons upon gallons of huckleberries.  We went three times, so far, up the mountain to look for them.  More trips are in the future.  It was my first time picking and eating huckleberries fresh..delicious.  They grow in a moister environment, so you have to go up to find them.  There are huge patches of these bushes at certain places.  There's even places named after them...Huckleberry Gap and Huckleberry Lake.  They're about the size of blueberries (big blueberries if you're lucky) and they're a deep purple-blue when ripe.  The first and second times we went up, we took a few snacks and picked for a few hours.  The third time..homemade salsa, fruit, and beer.  Slowly, we were making a great day out of it.  We even ran into a friend this last time when we stopped for a short climb to a beautiful view - almost 360 degree view of the area.  The road was quite bumpy, but our rewards for worth it.  We found the jackpot...so many huckleberries, we practically had to drag ourselves away.  And while the first time we made some huckleberry pancakes, the third time we finally deserved pie : )




It's almost September and I'm still the happy girl I was in the beginning..in fact my happiness and love have only grown.  Today, I got some last minute purchases done for my next future adventures...yoga mat and books for my training, and my train ticket home.  It feels like I've been gone for so long, but it's only been 3 months.  In another 3 months, I'll be taking my first cross-country train ride ever...

Until then, I'll enjoy the fresh air of the mountains, the chirping of the birds, the mooing of the cows, the barking of Hobbs, the silence of the garden, and the breath of life all around me.  The days are slowing down, and the weather is too.  Fall is creeping in with its warm hues and chilly mornings.  Here's to the beauty of world.








All my love,
Meg

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

And the food just keeps coming...

So the summer is winding down, as we are beginning to harvest lots, and plant for the fall.  Lately, we've been picking a lot of tomatoes, cucumbers at leasttt once a day, basil, corn, melons, strawberries, green beans, broccoli, and more.  Old green beans are being pulled out, and the next succession is popping up, with the next 2 on their stages of growth too.  The pumpkins are finally turning orange, and the romas finally starting turning red.  There's been a lot going on lately, and it seems like more is still on the way.  Actually, the onions are finally swelling and finishing up too.  It's as if the plants started to sense what time of the year it was and got to work.

I really enjoy harvesting.  We're picking so much things that are all of different colors.  You've got the green of dark green of zucchini, the flashy orange cherry tomatoes, the bright red strawberries, the blue-ish/green broccoli florets, and the red/purple-ish cabbage.  It's all so beautiful.  So with so much food, we spend Sunday canning.  We pickled a bunch of cucumbers, and then also beets that a friend had given us.  And on top of all the amazing vegetables and fruit we're getting, it's huckleberry time!  I had my first huckleberry during the beginning of my time - just frozen ones from last year, but now we've been enjoying them fresh.  They're a bit smaller than blueberries, bigger if you're lucky, and a very length task at picking them.  So far we've got up the mountain twice and got about 3 or 4 gallons each time.  Tomorrow is another adventure up the mountain to pick more.  We ran into other people who were picking as well.  People love their huckleberries...they might even get frugal with sharing!  Yesterday we also had zucchini blossoms.  I took the male flowers off the plant (male so we're not sacrificing any zucchini) and then we breaded and fried them.  They were pretty good, but since it's just a flower, there was a pretty strong oil flavor...

Last night was my last time going to yoga class :(  It's been such a great time though.  I really enjoyed Tuesdays night with Sara, when we went to yoga and then to her friend's house for wine and snacks.  It was always very relaxing and fun.  I've also been getting some more writing done, so that's been good.  The book is going a bit of a different direction right now, but I'm enjoying the ride. I wish that I could slow down time, because it's almost over.  I can't even believe that when I say it.  It's flown by so fast...

Enjoy some new photos from the past week...

My hammock in between two apple trees.  Always a good spot for a nap.

The chickens and the rooster.

An oriental salad we made from the gigantic Napa Cabbage with cucumbers, tomatoes, carrots, onions, and we threw in mandarin oranges.

The mixed beets that we got from the neighbor, which we pickled.

The mixture for the pickling beets.

Hobbes trying to steal my zip up.  

Tomatoes! What a beautiful array of shades of red.

More tomatoes, with some of the first romas.

Some zucchini, cucumbers, and figs.

Baby carrots that we planted for the fall

Baby beet..soo wonderfully colorful.

Bush beans that somehow still survived while the majority died and got pulled out.  We'll see what becomes of them.

“All life is an experiment. The more experiments you make the better.”  
- Ralph Waldo Emerson 

Thursday, August 16, 2012

From Start to End


Yesterday, I picked the last of the green beans and tore them out after.  It was a really cool project for me, because these same beans are one that I got to plant from seed, in the beginning of my time here.  It was beautiful to be able to see it from start to finish...growth to decay.  Every week it would get a little bigger.  Then, all of a sudden, the beans were there.  It almost seems magical how a seed can turn into such a glorious and bountiful plant.  

When you plant seeds, you really feel responsible for it.  You want it to grow strong and be all that it can be. Some of the gophers liked these beans, and it was hard to see all our hard work be eaten at, which was almost out of our control.  We try a lot to discourage and push away the gophers, but they are persistent creatures.  Then again, so are we.  

My gardening experience has really connected me to nature.  We have a tendency to act like we're above, and so much different than plants and animals - but in a way we're not.  We're just a different species and are able to pick and choose other plants and animals to use and abuse.  Plants try to control their lives too.  Some of the weeds try to mimic the surrounding plants in order to survive.  Isn't that what a lot of people do in life?  Other plants produce wonderful colors, or flowers to entice the bees to pay attention to them.  Don't people do certain things to draw attention at themselves, especially to advance beyond others?  We may not be a plant or an animal, but we share a lot in common with nature.  This world was not created for the benefit of only humans.  In fact, maybe Mother Earth isn't made to benefit any one species over another.  Maybe she has no plan, but instead balances life among all species.

We're at a point in life where a lot of nature and the environment is used, abused, and thrown away.  It's coming back though.  Soon, the water won't be drinkable, and the land will be contaminated with nuclear waste, and so on.  

You get what you give.  And Nature isn't going to just let the abuse go without consequences; without karma.  You get back what you give.  And I'd like to give as much as I can, because I'd like to see not only my generation receive a beautiful bounty, but the families to come too.

P.S. Tried the corn yesterday..soo yummy :)
Love, Meg


Sunday, August 12, 2012

Eating the Sun

Another successful weekend watching the house and garden.  A few of the days were just so hot, it seemed like the plants were just sucking up all the water.  Tonight for dinner, we had burritos.  I went out to the garden to shut off the waters, and got some romaine lettuce for dinner.  As I was walking back, I just thought about what I was really holding in my hand?  This green, crisp, thing...that I just cut from the ground.  Where did it come from?  Where does all our food come from?  In a way, what we all are eating is energy from the sun.  But we can't consume it that way, so we let plants do that work for us.  It's amazing to me.  What would we do without plants?  And all these plants start from a tiny, little seed.  And they don't take much from the Earth either.  Think about it...you plants a bunch of seeds in your garden, and feed them with water, and good soil.  In time, they will produce a bounty of delicious food for us to eat.  Think about one seed...while one seed translates into one carrot; one tomato seed turns into a plant that offers much more than one.  

Plants are beautiful, and I try not to take them for granted, because, well we''re connected to them; we need them.  Here are some pictures of what amazing plants are blooming right now...

It's beautiful how most things start green....and here it's finally getting its red color.

Yum :)



I think this world is amazing.  I'm happy not fully understanding, or not knowing why things are the way they are, but I am definitely in love with it all.  How do you look at our world and what all it offers, and what we turn it into, and not be amazing and in love?  I'm head over heels for it all.
  

Friday, August 10, 2012

Happy S'more Day!


Today is National S'more Day!  I got an e-mail (who knows how) with that news this morning.  Check it out!  You can learn the history to it.

Anyway, I'm in charge of the garden for the weekend again.  Yesterday, during the afternoon, I thought I'd go for a little run in between turning waters on.  So I decided to take a try down this road (Flat Creek) because I thought it would be flat and a different route.  In my head, I was weary of cougars for some reason.  Maybe the neighbor calling and saying there's been more siting of them.  As I'm running down this new road, I jump as a lizard scurries into the bushes.  I told myself, it's just a lizard, not a cougar...don't worry.  Not even a minute later, a dog appears trotting my direction..then he speeds up...crosses the streets right towards me.  I honestly thought I was about to be in a horrific fight with a dog; it was a bit terrifying for a few seconds.  It happened so fast I don't remember what I was screaming, maybe help? because I'd seen 2 men right before, but the dog was barking and growling at my feet.  I tried to put my hands at my ankles to protect my body and maybe hold him back from biting me.  Thankfully its owner got the dog to come back.  They were really sweet and apologized and said he's very protective.  Not many runners around here, so I'm sure the dog was a bit weary of this person running near their house.  I went over and pet the dog then to let it know I was no threat in case... I run that road again.....yeahhhhh, right :)

I'm reading a book called Second Nature by Michael Pollan right now.  I'm reading about the history of Americans lawns and how many Americans view nature and culture as two separate things.  But the garden is a place where we can create a connection and some balance between the two.  As he writes about his new experiences with woodchucks, I think about the gophers...the gophers.  They have been making lots of tunnels under the beds and eating the veggies.  At least it's a sign that they're good!  But anyway, our new possible tactic is placing golf balls in the beds.  Hopefully the gopher will try to go for it, and realize it's not food..and maybee leave and go somewhere else, thinking the food is gone.  We can only hope.

I've got some garden work to do today...transplanting and weeding, and raking more leaves to the chickens. I'm working alone, but thankfully I've got Hobbes to protect me.  Maybe he'll even do his little butt dance ...


Monday, August 6, 2012

August is Here Already!


It's August 6th today.  Just writing that out makes me realize how fast this summer has gone.  I can't believe I've been in Oregon for 2 months already, and only a more left :(  I fell in love with it here and slowly am realizing that there are new adventures in the near future.

This past weekend, I watched the house and garden alone.  It was a good experience doing it all by myself.  While I enjoyed the quiet, it was also slightly harder to motivate myself to do some work.  There wasn't too much to be done, but it's definitely easier to get out there and do work when you know others are with you.  I think that if I have a farm in the future, I'd like to share it with at least one person.  It's nice to share that experience, and it makes it a lot more fun.
On Sunday, I woke up, had some breakfast and coffee and went out the garden again.  With the afternoons being so hot, it's really nice to get things done before it heats up.  I did a bunch of weeding in the greenhouses and making sure the plants were getting some water.  Things are looking great.  I cut off a few zucchinis that were out of control!  The cucumbers are totally making a comeback on the aphids (knock on wood) and melons are popping up out of nowhere it seems.  In a week or so, we're going to have a good amount of new vegetables.  But here's a peak at what's going on now...

I believe these are hot long peppers.  Thought the skinnier ones were, and used them in my salsa, and then Sara let me know that they were the cayenne peppers..woops!


Melons!

The first eggplant

The roma tomatoes are their way.  They're almost as tall as the greenhouse right now!

The sunflower that doesn't know to face the sun.

Walla Walla Onions...they should swell soon, and then shortly after be done.

The 5 eggs I got on Saturday...with 4 chickens and 1 rooster...I guess the rooster decided to jump in on the action too.

Today, we harvested some berries and three different kinds of potatoes.  The gophers got some of the potatoes, but we still had a good amount.  Sara said they are normally bigger, so not ideal, but better than nothing!  The blueberries are here too!  Anddd, the beautiful sunflowers are blooming.  Although the one didn't get the message that it's supposed to face the sun.

I'm extremely lucky to be doing what I'm doing in my life.  I'll never forget this summer.  Thank you nature for finally reeling me in...I'm hooked for life.