More Seedlings at the Center of the Universe

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More and more lights are being switched on in the basement. In fact, we’re almost full up! We’ve got three shelves going now, the bottom one with heat mat, the top two for “growing up” and cold germinators. I also have  a couple of flats sitting on the shelf in the porch, behind a curtain: they’re medicinals, Aconitum carmichaeli and Giant Solomon’s Seal (Polygonatum biflorium), that like it dark and like to start in cool soils to warm up with the weather.

Today I added Good King Henry and Sea Kale, also, in medicinals, Self Heal (Prunella vulgaris), Echinacea purpurea, Boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum), St John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum), Hyssop and Motherwort. And as for fruits: Goji (Lycium barbarum). LOTS of Goji.

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The Goji berry forest. The seeds came packaged in their fruits, which were eaten.

Amie planted her own seeds weeks ago and had her first bite: microgreens, kale and chard!

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To prevent damping off  I added an oscillating fan to the setup, and brewed a big pot of chamomile tea. Some for them, some for me.

~

The other day when in the car she said she didn’t mind looking out the window on short trips, she didn’t get bored. I said, Well there is a whole world to see. She said, Yes, and I haven’t even seen all of it! I said, It’s not possible for one person to see all of it. I’m sure David Attenborough hasn’t seen all of the world.

Amie: “Really?”

Me: “I doubt he’s seen Wayland.” (where we live)

Amie: “What?! No way, Mama, of course he has seen Wayland!

Well, of course he has, silly me. It is the center of her universe.

Irrigation, Coming Up!

Why get one if you can get eight?

My friend R and I rented a 14-foot truck and drove quite a stretch to pick up eight of these. Only seven fit, and that with some wedging. Turns out that “14 feet” includes the useless little “attic” above the cabin. So we’ll be going back to get the last one – and we’ll probably throw in a couple more, according to how many will fit the pickup. We dropped one off at Rs place (her house doesn’t even have gutters but we’ll figure that one out) and left the other six at my place.

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Here they are, waiting in the melting snow. Three are for the local elementary schools, three are for our place (two for rain water, one  to grow fish in it, for eating, if our pond takes too much time), and the one left over is for whomever is interested. I’m sure we’ll have no trouble finding someone. The two friends who came to help us unload the truck were already talking maple sap, honey storage, a water-spray tank to go on their pickup truck…

You can stack two of these (full) on top of each other and take advantage of the pressure build-up to hook it up to an irrigation system. I’m keeping an eye on Leigh’s system at 5 Acres and a Dream and if it has proven itself by the time we’re ready, we’ll nick – I mean copy it.

Of Flowers

I’m sitting at my desk, drinking hot tea of

.         chamomile,

.     peppermint,

.   licorice,

and honey. There’s a book open, in the pool of lamp light. It’s William Carlos Williams’s Collected Poems, at “Asphodel.” Reading it is like descending, step by step, into a deep sorrow, from

.   root,

.     to leaf,

.       to flower,

The one you hope will never open and unfold. The one you hope you will never see blossoming, billowing. Williams writes:

 

The poem

.                  if it reflects the sea

.                                      reflects only

its dance

.                 upon that profound depth

.                                     where

it seems to triumph.

.                  The bomb puts an end

.                                    to all that.

I am reminded

.                  that the bomb

.                                    also

is a flower

Medicine Garden

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This, dear friends, is a massive apothecary! The beginnings of it. Some of these envelopes hold just 5 seeds. Many hold seeds that need scraping with sandpaper and intricate regimes of warm-moist and/or cold-dry conditions. Some will take years (years!) to germinate. Suffice it to say, these aren’t your average lettuce seeds. Each one is special. Each one is demanding. But if I do right by them, each one will repay me and my community a thousandfold.

As for my silence here, I’ve been clearing my desk just so I can devote the necessary time to these seeds. Today was the day it all came together. I sent off an application to teach a course on collapse (yes, you heard that right!) at Tufts Experimental College. I finished the Solar Wayland Report (a rather technical policy-oriented report which you can read here). I also submitted a grant application for Transition Wayland. What a relief to have all those done! Added up they amount to a hundred dense pages of text, and they have been months in the making.

Earth Day has been a non-stop promotional effort (we have articles in the local media every week, all the way up to the weekend itself: check them our here/here, the write-up of our house here/here, and here/here). I only wrote the one about about our house, we have a great team volunteering for this!  The group is also investigating making Transition Wayland into a co-op. And then there are the plans to promote solar hot water. Oh, and on Monday a friend and I are taking a 14-foot truck to pick up no less than eight IBC totes plus some barrels we’re planning to convert into compost barrels…

I’d better be off to my basement now to sow those seeds, before I get sidetracked!

Grief under the Full Moon

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Though very tired I went on the Full Moon Walk yesterday evening, a lovely tradition or what we hope will become a tradition, when a group of us walks in the dark under the full moon, either quietly or in conversation. The clouds drifted apart enough to let the moonlight through only at the end of our walk, but before then the blanket of snow reflected enough of the residual sunlight and of course the human-made light for us to get by without flashlights, without breaking any ankles.

Walks like these tend to be spiritually “loaded” – sometimes in a funny, humorous way, sometimes a bit morose, most often both in rapid succession. When someone brought up the very real possibility that these open fields, which in season grow hay and bluebirds, would be turned into soccer fields (and parking lots, of course), we all rose up in protest, but then inevitably the conversation turned to the recent history of other such atrocities, and how it got to be that yet another atrocity, here, in this field, is legally, even culturally possible.  No one went too deep into time, though – what atrocities lie there are too much. And someone said: “Well, that was a buzz kill!” and we laughed and enjoyed the walk – the enjoyment of the walk the very reason for, if need be, fighting for this field, and therefore, don’t get me wrong, a very worthwhile effort.

But it set the tone for me.

Geese started honking at each other in the dark distance, calling up that deeper time, and deeper still. How ancient are their species and their flyways and, glory, here I stand listening to them, in what is truly their field. Further off was also the sound of the traffic on the road. I wondered out loud why there was so much light (the cloud cap was still tightly drawn) and why it was so orange/pink – but no, no one else would have it. Someone said it was the snow reflecting the light, believing, perhaps, that one being natural, so must the other.

I was not the only one, though, struggling with the contradiction. It ran through the hour. How ugly and artificial our world is, how nurturing is nature.  Someone talked about dragon lines, which are alignments in landscapes. Are they natural, artificial? But the thread was never really taken up. It was – it was – too enjoyable to be there.

It wasn’t time for activism, for plotting how we would save this field, get others to walk it with us and get attached to it. What then, was I feeling that I could  not let go?

I laughed with everyone when one of us, who was not looking down at the slushy/slippery treacherous ground while we were descending a slope, all strung-out, called moooo-OOOON in a very wild and haunting way. We all stopped and looked up then and the ice floes in the sky broke up and there she was, that body. Others took up the call, but not the one dog present. I found I could laugh with them while the moon pulled at me. Like Josh Ritter writes,

“she pulls on your heart as she pulls on the sea”

and she ripped the grief right out of me.

Funny, I thought, that it would be the moon, that extra-terrestrial that is oblivious to, above our mayhem. Then I did a double-take. Of course, the moon too has seen our mayhem: we went there, too, planted a flag there. We just couldn’t resist.

And that that was a US flag also mattered. I have been thinking of what it means that I immigrated to this country, that I live on and off the many takings and that I too am therefore a taker. I started reading about the indigenous people to learn what it is like for those living in a dying culture, to see it die. That was at first. I soon realized that by immigrating here, living here, calling this “my home”, I too am living on the corpse of that murdered culture.

I’ve been in that state, lately, of openness to whatever accusation the land will throw at me. If I call it home (whether rightfully or not), the land has the right to call me out.

But here now were the geese, calling me out, and the pink field, too. And now the moon as well!? I wondered, how do I even stand upright and laugh at the wild yell of  these fellow human beings clad in Gore-Tex and Ray-Tech, and leather. How is this even possible? And then it hit me.

This is not guilt that I feel, but grief. The field, the geese, the moon were telling me this. Stop feeling guilty, start grieving. You cannot live with guilt, you cannot make peace with it. But we want you to live, we want you to make peace with yourself, and we want you to grieve, because only if you are grieving will you be truly, deeply alive and able to do right by us.

On the way back, five minutes to the parking lot (yes), I could no longer hold it back. I could typically not directly say what I was feeling (I hope that skill, too, I will learn), so I anounced my admiration for Stephen Jenkinson and his observation that

“guilt is grief for amateurs.”

Well, that came out of nowhere for the friend to whom I had directed the pronouncement. She said, but let’s not dwell on guilt, and added that that’s what she likes about Transition, that it’s so positive. And I said, yes, guilt we must avoid, or work through, but grief… grief… I could not make myself understood, but she must have grasped some of it. She brought up the documentary Traces of the Trade, A Story from the Deep North, about a woman (the filmmaker) who realized that her ancestors were the largest slave-trading family in the US, and who set out to stare this atrocity in the face.

Well, had I not just had the Great Insight into grief-notguilt, I would have stark fallen over, right there in the slush in front of everyone, and wailed. How had I left out that atrocity? This land is piled with corpses…

I reeled but stood, quite speechless. My friend and I left it at that, an opening. I came home and after Amie was asleep I watched the trailer of Traces of the Trade and was in for another  surprise. In that trailer, Katrina Browne, the filmmaker, says it, literally, exactly that: that once she looked, unflinching, at the atrocities and her and her family and the world’s role in it,

“it became natural to want to make things right, not out of personal guilt, but out of grief.”

I have to stop being an amateur and start the work, part of which may well be to teach the absolute necessity that we not mistake grief for guilt, that we must grieve because the situation is grievous, and that only then can we start the work of making things right.

A Refuge not a Model

I often talk about making our own place into a model. At this year’s Earth Day, for instance, we’re doing Open Houses all over town, and ours is one of them. We’ll show the PV and solar hot water system (which they’re putting in as I write this), the compost, veg and perennial garden, bees, chickens and rain water catchment. We’ll also show plans and hopefully the foundations of the Hugelswale system, the fish pond and the orchard, which won’t be established yet. Most of all, we’ll show how it all fits together, how they’re all elements in a wholesome and open system, along with the line-drying, the solar cookers, the eclectic library, the cabinet full of homemade medicine…

But this talk of models and modeling doesn’t seem right. Not because of arrogance – I’m a firm believer now in Jenkinson’s observation, that you have to risk arrogance because, you know, we have a huge amount of hard work to do. No, it’s more about what it would mean for us to live in a “model house”. It would stop being the refuge that we want it to be (for us, our family and friends, the community), thus also stop being a model of what we really want people to see: a refuge. Long argument short: you can’t model a refuge.

I’d still want people to come, but not to come and see, not to find a demonstration for them to observe, pen and paper in hand.  They’d come to participate – which means, of course, to work. Not looking in at “life” behind a glass partition, but immersion.

First Seeds are In

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Amie and I planted the first seeds in flats. The heat mat is now fully booked. I’ll move the mache because it doesn’t need warmth to germinate and use that space for the leeks and onions, which I like to give a haircut so I can munch on the trimmings while working the seeds. This was the first time Amie stuck it out the whole hour and a half to clean and set up the place, and sow the seeds. She has her own containers, for her own garden box come Spring time. She and I have checked every day now, but nothing yet.

In on 2/22:

  • broccoli
  • chard
  • collards
  • brussels sprouts
  • spinach
  • lettuce
  • mache
  • parsley
  • celery
  • lobelia
  • valerian

DATA! First Solar Hot Water Data

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Is this neat or what? We have a SECUSOL system, manufactured by Wagner. The MassCEC sprang for the monitoring system. They get valuable data (which they use to determine rebates, etc.) and we get to look in.

The chart above is today’s. It was grey throughout. The top of the water tank (green line at the top), where the heated water hangs out, waiting to be drawn on, hovered around the desired 130F. However, as you can see by the thick red line bordering the pink area, the temperature of the heat exchange fluid coming from the panels was only around 70F to begin with, dipping further as the day got colder and the clouds thicker. That means that our backup (oil furnace) had to kick in the difference.  That also means, however, that it was doing some of the heating (indicated by the pink area) of the water in the cold bottom part of the tank. At 5:30, for instance, the heat exchange fluid released about 10F to that water: it was going into the tank from the panels at 70F and coming out again, as indicated by the thick blue line, at a little below 60F. Around 15:30 (3:30 pm for you Americans) the fluid in the panels was no longer warmer than the cold water in the bottom of the tank, so the system shut down, not wanting to cool the water in the tank.

(The thin black lines are interesting too: this flow rate indicates our water consumption. That tall peak around 9:30 is me taking a shower, and the two peaks around 13:30 are us replenishing our fish tank, and the last two peaks are DH clearing the drains).

Below is yesterday, the 22nd of Feb, a very sunny day and a very different chart from today’s. The panels provided enough and, between 9:30 and 15:30, sometimes even more than enough, heat to get the water in the tank to the desired temperature.

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Now I’m thinking we should adjust our water consumption schedule: shower on sunny days, and later in the day too. But first we’ll gather more data.

Medicinal Herb Purchase

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I found this great seed (and plant) supplier, Horizon Herbs, through Mountain Rose Herbs, where I usually buy my dried herbs. I admit I went a little crazy. But if I can grow all of these, harvest them and make them into medicine, and also take seed from them and propagate them… it’s a dream I’ve had for years now, the apothecary dream.

  Mullein Common (Verbascum thapsus) packet of 100 seeds organic

  Goji (Lycium barbarum) packet of 100 seeds in dried fruit organic

  Aconite Chinese (Aconitum carmichaeli) packet of 50 seeds organic

  Aloe arborescens (Aloe arborescens) packet of 20 seeds

  Black Cohosh (Cimicifuga racemosa) packet of 50 seeds organic

  Boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) packet of 100 seeds organic

  Chamomile Roman (Chamaemelum nobile) packet of 500 seeds organic

  Cleavers (Galium aparine) packet of 50 seeds organic

  Horehound White (Marrubium vulgare) packet of 100 seeds organic

  Jewelweed Orange (Impatiens capensis) packet of 20 seeds organic

  Lobelia Official (Lobelia inflata) packet of 1000 seeds organic

  Lobelia Set (3 seed packets): Lobelias — Great Blue & Official; Cardinal Flower (all organic)

  Mugwort Common (Artemisia vulgaris) packet of 300 seeds organic

  Echinacea purpurea packet of 200 seeds organic

  Myrrh Garden (Myrrhis odorata) packet of 10 seeds organic

  Nettles Stinging (Urtica dioica) packet of 200 seeds organic

  Pipsissewa (Chimaphila umbellata) packet of 500 seeds

  Pleurisy Root Official (Asclepias tuberosa) packet of 50 seeds organic

  Saint Johns Wort (Hypericum perforatum) packet of 500 seeds

  Self-Heal (Prunella vulgaris) packet of 50 seeds organic

  Skullcap Official (Scutellaria lateriflora) seeds organic

  Solomons Seal Giant (Polygonatum biflorum) packet of 20 seeds

  Uva Ursi (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi) packet of 30 seeds

  Yellow Dock (Rumex crispus) packet of 300 seeds organic

  Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis) packet of 100 seeds organic

And from Fedco I bought:

  • Astragalus OG
  • Borage OG
  • Bodegold Chamomile
  • Bronze Fennel OG
  • Hyssop
  • Licorice
  • Motherwort OG
  • Mad-dog Skullcap
  • Topas St Johnswort
  • Valerian
  • White Yarrow
  • Maya Orange Calendula OG
  • Solar Flashback Calendula Mix OG

My Weekend: Holding the Edge, With Friends

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Holding the edge with a bunch of intrepid friends. A  local “rally” in solidarity with our friends marching in Washington DC.  We stayed till I no longer felt my fingertips and toes, and my speech became slurred. Then we had hot cocoa.

This is the article I wrote for the local press:

Waylanders Rally for Climate Change in DC and locally

On Sunday, 17 February, a small group of Waylanders stood on the corner of Routes 20 and 27 holding signs with “Climate Change Act Now” and “No Tar Sands”. They were showing their solidarity with the tens of thousands marching in Washington D.C. that day to urge President Obama to move the nation forward on climate.

“I couldn’t make it to the rally in D.C.,” said Anne Harris, “so it was fun to have our small rally here in Wayland. My hope is to keep climate action in the forefront of people’s minds as we ask our leaders to seek solutions to the country’s challenges”.

The freezing temperature and nasty wind in Wayland rivaled the conditions in D.C., where 35,000 marched to make the largest Climate March in US history, according to 350.org.

Wayland resident Sabine von Mering, who was there, said, “To me this march was a great experience because, like Bill McKibben, I had been waiting for this movement to come about for many years. Since I first came to the US twenty years ago I thought it’s impossible that a country that brought forth the civil rights movement and Dr. King, and people like Henry David Thoreau and Rachel Carson, would fall so far behind Europe in demanding environmental justice and action on climate change. Today at this march I saw the real America, the USA that I love and cherish. People who care that our political leaders listen to our best scientists, people who take a two-day bus ride to make sure their voice is not drowned out by moneyed lobbyists. People of all ages and walks of life who join together saying ‘enough is enough. We must protect this planet. It’s the only one we have’.”

The group at the corner of the Cochituate and Boston Post Roads also had the blowing snow to contend with and, admittedly, not that many bodies to stay warm, but all that didn’t seem to matter. That the day was a typical winter’s day wasn’t all that ironic to Andrea Case. “A snowy winter makes people question ‘global warming’,” she said. “But intense weather, whether blizzards, hurricanes, droughts or repeated record high temperature days, are all harbingers of climate change.”

Asked if this was a successful event, Kaat Vander Straeten, said, “Yes! Look, there were only seven of us, but there was no place I’d rather be. Hundreds of people driving by saw our message, and that wouldn’t have happened if we had stayed home.”

Back in DC, von Mering noted, “There was clearly a somber note to the gathering, because we all know that our chances of winning this fight are pretty slim. Which is why it was so important to see so many of us. Every single person I met today understands what’s at stake. This was a gathering of smart people who care and who want to turn things around. People who are willing to risk a lot for everyone’s sake. I was proud to be with them. I feel greatly encouraged for the future.”