All ready for tonight. A day late, sure, but my chances of getting my husband home by sundown on a Friday night are about the same as actually getting Elijah to come in the front door.
It tastes just as good on a Saturday, anyway and a rest is just as pleasant on Sunday. I don't believe in being dogmatic about it. In this society, if you can rest every seven days or so, I don't think what day you rest particularly matters.
Hope you are all having a restful weekend.
Today, under a brilliant blue sky and cool temperatures, we pulled the last of the tomato plants out, disengaged the old cucumber vines and even managed to find a few stray onions buried underground, in perfect eating condition. It's a little bit early to clean out the garden here, but with the El Nino bringing more humidity, more warmth and therefore more insect pressure, I thought it was wise to plow it all down and throw some chicken manure on top of it all before leaving it for winter, a gift to the earthworms and other bugs who live under the soil.
I also decided that I'm going to practice my own modified version of what's called the Shemitttah year in the Torah. It's an agricultural mandate to let the land rest in the seventh year of production. As it's stated in the Book of Leviticus,
"God spoke to Moses at Mount Sinai, telling him to speak to the Israelites and say to them: When you come to the land that I am giving you, the land must be given a rest period, a sabbath to God. For six years you may plant your fields, prune your vineyards, and harvest your crops, but the seventh year is a sabbath of sabbaths for the land."
I've expounded on the virtues of the idea of Sabbath -- for both religious and secular reasons -- on this blog before, and I'm sure you realize (if you've been reading this blog awhile) we've technically only been on this land for three summers. It's not a Shemittah year in any way....except of course, for the farmer. That would be me. I have been growing a good portion of our food since around 2008, when I planted our first raised beds in our garden back at the old house. And I've been canning our produce each fall and winter since that time as well.
I'm actually overdue for a good Shemittah by a couple of years now.
During that time, a lot has changed, including me working more outside the home during summer and fall, (prime growing and canning time, but also busy season at the winery) and our kids going off to college, changing our food storage needs considerably. This last summer was crazy, trying to keep up the garden and my job, and I still have 40 pounds of tomatoes in the freezer to can as proof of that. I'll get to it before the end of the year, hopefully once the summer is gone for good and a boiling water-bath canner heating up the kitchen is seen as a friend, not an enemy.
And so my version of this Shemittah year will mean leaning out from the vegetable garden from this fall to next, and reassessing exactly what our needs are now that we have only two of us at home on a regular basis, and now that we also live in a place where we eat elsewhere a fair portion of the time.
Normally right now, for instance, I'd be planting my carrot crop in earnest. But as of this writing, I still have a freezer full of carrots from last year which we haven't even started eating yet. So clearly I don't need carrots. Carrots in 2016 will be a Shemittah crop for us, then. I won't be growing them.
I will be growing a little lettuce and some onions, both super easy crops to maintain (meaning zero maintenance). I will be pruning and caring for our berry vines, our grapes and our fruit trees in spring because they need it, and if we get an abundant harvest I will gladly take it, because we got almost nothing last year (guess the berries took their own Shemittah year in 2015). Come spring, I will be planting something in the raised beds as well, it just won't be nearly to the extent I have in years past. I may have one raised bed's worth of produce. Probably an eggplant or two, one squash, three tomatoes....you get the picture. Farming Light.
It's time for this farmer to take a break and have her Sabbath from the vegetable garden. Time for the land to exhale and rest, too. And in another three years, it may be time for a true Shemittah year where both the land and I take a good rest, but this time it's not so much for the land itself as much as the farmer.
There will still be plenty of homesteading stuff (and blogging) going on around here -- soap making, cooking from scratch, eating abundantly from the over-storage we've managed to accumulate in the last few years, and finding new ways to continue turning our space from a zone of consumption into a zone of production.
But everything needs a rest; even God rested on the "7th Day." I am looking forward to my 2016 "Petite Shemittah," a sabbath for this farmer but not a dogmatic one as much as an acknowledgment that everything, including ourselves, needs a rest sometimes.
I'm one of those people who believes that taking a breather from our regular responsibilities is one of the best things we can do to increase our productivity. There's a basic rhythm to all of life, if we care to listen; the heart rests briefly between beats (the only break it takes during our entire life), the ocean rests briefly between waves, and even the wind blows in gusts, seemingly resting in between them.
Human beings are no different, being an integral part of this world. We also need a rest from our activities. Today I'm taking a sabbath from the crazy to-do list that dominates my life 99 percent of the time. I will putter, I will read, I will do no thing that feels like work, and I will ponder.
This morning the coffee was brewed up on the stove minus the help of an automatic coffee maker, and other than the clink-clink of the pellet stove keeping the house warm, it's a quiet, unplugged kind of morning. I love it. I used to call this kind of sabbath-keeping going "deep house," because usually it involved several hours of just being at home, opening the windows and sitting quietly with a book. But I've discovered a few hours at the beach is also a good sabbath activity, and leaves me just as rejuvenated and refreshed as a good night's sleep, or a quiet afternoon here.
So I don't know whether it will be here or at the beach, but either way, I am claiming today for myself. Today I will strive to be as unplugged from the artificial world as possible, while being as plugged into the natural one as I can be. It may be by walking along the beach on the last warm day we'll have for awhile, or it may be sitting by a sunny window reading a book.
But today I step back from my life momentarily, to just be. To rest between beats, and thereby rejuvenate myself so I can work better when I return to my regularly scheduled life...which will probably pick back up sometime later today, if things go like they usually do around here.
Today our Christmas tree will come down, after a lovely month of enjoying its pretty lights. As much as I love looking at all the bright ornaments, I am ready to get the house back in order so it can be clean and organized by the New Year. I'm also done in the kitchen, after a long month of cooking for people during Thanksgiving, Chanukah, and then Christmas. We won't starve the next few weeks, but my meals will consist of easy-to-make dinners that don't leave me standing in front of the stove or preparation counter for hours like I have been doing.
Out in the garden, the cauliflower, lettuce, onions, scallions and carrots in our four raised planter beds appear healthy, but are growing slower than ever. This time last year I was already busy harvesting and freezing our bounty from out there. Maybe it's the below-freezing nights (far more than are normal for us), or the fact that we've had crops in those beds pretty consistently now for a couple of years. The soil may be a little low on nutrients. I'm not sure of the culprit, but after we harvest what's growing now, I'll throw some grass seed down, then plow the new green blades into the soil to enrich it while giving the beds a few weeks' fallow. Guess the biblical mandate of a time of sabbath, rest, or fallow is good for everyone and everything, including the earth itself. There's a time to create, and a time to rest.