Showing posts with label organic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label organic. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Wandered far afield


That's a term one of my old bosses used in management meetings when he and the two under-managers he supervised (one of whom was me) would find some topic related to work, but not actually pertaining to work directly, and happily chat about it for a half-hour or so before finding our way back to business.

"Well, we've wandered far afield..." he would say, and that was our cue that we needed to get back to the real business at hand.

And it's a term I've rediscovered in these first days of 2016, as it applies to myself and the life I've been living.

One of the ways hit home yesterday, when there was a power outage at about 8 a.m. The house was cold and dark, and because we chose an electrically-driven pellet stove instead of a wood stove the house hadn't warmed up yet, and now would have no chance of doing so. We have a central heating system we use for back-up, but of course it doesn't work without electricity either. 

So as the temperature dropped inside and I bundled up, I reviewed that choice. Did I ever.

So I sat in the cold and read my Kindle, played music on my iPod and checked Facebook and email on my phone until those devices all died. At that point I decided to head into town to run some errands (thank God I had gas), where at least I'd be in some warm buildings and I could use the car to charge all my devices and run the heater while driving around, which felt SO delicious after being in a cold house for several hours, let me tell you.

Where I feel like I am.

One ironic thing is that the book I was reading before my Kindle died was one called "Patient Heal Thyself" about a young man who discovers healing of his Crone's disease through eating a diet identical to what our biblical ancestors would have eaten 2,000 years or more ago. Yes, I was reading a book about the diet of the 20 BC man on a 21st century Kindle. Boggles the mind, no? If it had been on papyrus I could have at least kept reading without fear of a battery dying.

Anyway, the book reminded me of a time when I adhered to a similar diet just through making healthy food choices and refusing to buy into the industrial food system of feedlot beef, trans-fats, refined sugar, and over-processed bleached white flour. While I haven't backslid all the way (you will not find me in line at McDonald's when McRib returns, for instance) I have cut corners as life got more busy and complex and food still needed to be served. 

So to review, I cut corners by getting a pellet stove instead of a wood stove and I cut corners by just accepting what the regular supermarket thought I should be eating. It's an uncomfortable truth that sometimes we know what the right thing is to do and still do something else anyway. And when we do that, we wander far afield from the selves we want to be.

The solution for the pellet stove is a simple one -- we can buy a small generator for the house or a back-up battery for the stove itself. And the solution to the food issue is there as well. We're already growing a lot of what we eat, but the fact is, even if we had 10 times as many acres we would probably still not grow everything we consume. And so the choice then becomes to purchase those things at the health food store, expensively, or drive an hour's south to the local Whole Foods Market and get it there.

And since I've committed to getting back to those things that matter most to me in 2016, perhaps you'll notice something of a course correction as we get farther into the year. It will be a homecoming of sorts. I've wandered far afield, and it's time to get back on the road I most want to be on -- gardening, planting, conscious food-buying, and healthy living.  It doesn't so much mean giving up on any good things as much as taking the time for different good things that aren't necessarily as easy to come by. 

One thing is for sure: When you wander far afield, eventually the road that leads home will call you back to it, if you're willing to listen. I'm listening, road. I'm listening.

Where I want to be.


Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Weeds

It's that time of year.  Even though we haven't had much rain, the spring weeds and grasses have still gone wild.  And so, the age old question gets asked:  How do we deal with it?


One property's forage is another's weed issue 

Big Ag's solution to weed issues is to spray with something commercially strong, like Professional Strength Round-Up.  This usually results in a feisty disagreement (aka an argument) between us, as I don't believe in using commercial herbicides.  True, their manufacturers claim they carry a low mammalian risk ("low" is not the same thing as non-existent, however), but they are also known endocrine disruptors for mammals.  And the chickens, the frogs and toads which live on our property are all non-mammals, and are therefore even more vulnerable to its effects.  It's simply not worth the risk.

This afternoon, after the rain was over, I went out with a Hula Hoe and tried to knock some of the ones in our back yard down, but could not do it.  The hoe started to pull up the landscape fabric the former owner has put throughout the back yard, which is rapidly shredding and is therefore less effective against blocking weed growth.  I didn't want to shred it anymore and worsen the problem, so away went the Hula Hoe. 

Two options I'm considering are using a small propane garden torch, which appeals to the latent arsonist in me (Fire!  Fun!) plus offers me the feeling of payback when the star thistle that scratched my calves so badly disappears in a pull of smoke.  The other option is a 20% solution of vinegar, called horticultural vinegar, which is safe for organic gardens as well as for domestic and wild animals to come in contact with.  

Another option is to just weed whack it all down until summer comes, when anyplace we've not irrigated will become so dry nothing can survive.  We killed a whole lawn that way last summer.

Either way, it's on.  Me against the weeds.  If you don't hear from me for three days, please send out a search party ... and have them load up the garden propane torches when they come looking for me.  Things are ugly out there, I'm tellin' ya.  I have the scratched calves to prove it.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Trees of Antiquity


We have a great resource here on the Central Coast for heirloom fruit trees.  It's a company called Trees of Antiquity here in Paso Robles, which specializes in organically grown heirloom fruit trees.  When I first heard about them, I initially balked at the idea of buying an organic tree.  After all, it's the fruit that matters on a tree, and whether or not you've produced organic fruit depends on how YOU treat the tree -- what you do with your soil, as well as how you manage your weeds and pests.  

But in thinking a little more, I realized that an organic tree farm is better for the water table, the air quality, and the ultimate sustainability of the land it sits on.  So by giving them my business, I'm making a little investment in the environment of this beautiful region I live in, and helping keep it healthy for generations to come.

I picked up a Golden Grimes apple tree today, parent of today's Golden Delicious apple.  And I have three ollalieberry bushes and two blueberry bushes on order.  Planting season is indeed in full swing, and I hope to someday, years from now, be able to take a blanket and a book and sit among my trees, berry bushes and vines and remember this first planting season on our new land.

For more information on Trees of Antiquity, check out their website.  I think you can even have trees shipped to you, if you live out of the area!

http://www.treesofantiquity.com/