So here I am, in the middle of the February Funk trying to
think of something upbeat and exciting to write about gardendwellers FARM. We do have little rosemary seeds in their
trays and we’re anxiously awaiting some form of life to show itself but even
this puts us in a little funk as usually we have been getting our rosemary as
plugs and this year it seems our ‘supplier cannot provide them’. We have had some of the best looking rosemary
from plugs and when we’ve tried seed in the past we have had nowhere near the
same quality.
Planning for this upcoming year has been fun as we are
adding lemon balm back into the mix. After
years of growing it and having no one buy it – last year we actually had
requests so back into the rotation it goes.
We ordered a few more fruit trees for the orchard and we’ll be trialing
some basil and cilantro seeds for Prairie Road Organic Seed Company http://www.prairieroadorganic.co/Prairie_Road_Organic_Seed/Welcome.html
this summer and we’re excited about that
as well. The new labels with the new
farm address have been ordered and should be here soon and Barry is going to MN
later this month and will bring back a load of containers for the grocery store
herbs.
All of this garden fun aside, its been hell here the last
few weeks. Winter has really gotten into
our bones and the February Funk seems to be here to stay for a little
while. Sixty below wind chills recently
shredded the high tunnel of a fellow producer in Antler, ND so we know all too
well what wind and extreme cold does to plastic and every day I watch the high
tunnel and hold my breath. Another plastic that has me in the doldrums is my mittens. Let me explain.
I’ve had this great pair of mittens my best friend made me
over 15 years ago. I use them every day. They are warm and snug, just the right size and comfortable. In this very cold spell we’ve been having its
typical for us to gather in the shop around the wood stove in between doing
chores outside. I had been out for an extra-long
time with the barn dog and my hands and mittens were really cold. I took them off and without thinking laid
them on the wood stove. You guessed it –
they immediately melted. Yes folks, its
true, fleece is made out of recycled milk cartons and plastic. Now my favorite mittens are stiff, hard and
mostly bare of any material that would keep me warm.
I know I could go upstairs and just pick out
one of the many pairs of wool mittens I have made in the past and keep in the
cupboard for just such an occasion but I’m sure that part of what kept me warm
in my favorite mittens was the love sewn in by my best friend.
The electric bill came the other day and put Barry into
spasms. Following the spasms came the
mad dash around the house to turn off everything electric that wasn’t absolutely
necessary and the scramble to add more layers of clothes as he turned down the
heat. I kept my office door shut so he
wouldn’t notice under the desk. The cold winter has brought extra pounds on our bodies, short tempers and low spirits.
We’ve been doing the best we can to get outside even in the wind
and snow and forty below. Of course we
have the new barn dog and that makes trips outside necessary at least every
four hours during the day. Poor
baby. Her outings have been much briefer
than she would prefer due to the cold.
She LOVES the snow. She was built
for it, stocky and thick with a heavy coat that keeps out all kinds of cold and
sheds the snow like crazy.
To hold back the Funk I’ve been trying to complete all the ‘art’
projects I had lined up for this winter.
The Paverpol fish are now complete and I have to say I’m pleased,
although I was hoping to have enough Paverpol to do three fish and only got
two.
We also made the decorations out of barbed wire that I’ve
been dying to try. The tree didn’t come
out like I planned but its OK and you can still tell it’s a tree and the cone
flower came out good enough to give it to my friend Lorrie for her birthday so
we’ll count that one as a success. You
know you’re desperate for something to do when you and your hubby spend the
afternoon bending old rusty barbed wire into shapes.
The new quilt to snuggling on the couch is not
done. It has been attempted and put away
too many times to count. Our old quilt,
sewn for us by my mother when we first married almost 30 years ago, has given
up the fight and let dry rot and use tatter it to pieces. Ida still thinks it’s ‘the bomb’ but every
time Barry and I try to snuggle we hear the all familiar sound of fabric
running for its life and giving up the race at the end of the seam.
After finally getting the top all sewn together (and mind
you this is not complicated quilt pattern, just 9 inch squares sewn in rows) I
put the top and back into the wash to pre-shrink before sewing them
together. I felt I was on a roll so I
went right into ironing them only to find that many of the squares had raveled away
so much that some of the seams were at the breaking point. It got put away that day. My friend Janet at Simple Threads in
Bottineau, http://www.simplethreads.net/ gave me some suggestions on how to fix it so
yesterday Barry and I set out to finish the darn thing. We fixed all the raveled seams and ironed it
all nice and flat, laid the top, bottom and stuffing out on the floor and got
everything all even and smooth. Barry
helped hold the weight of the blanket as I sewed the final edge seam and then we
went to turn it right side out only to find we had put the pieces together in
the wrong order and the back was on the inside and stuffing was on the
outside. More than a few choice words
were said, I think a few door slams were involved and definitely a trip outside
with the barn dog to cool off ensued.
G_d bless my wonderful hubby though who cooled off faster than I did and
had it all taken apart and laid out in the right order by the time I returned. We’ll attempt the final stiches today, Lord
grant us patience….
After the quilt is done its time to move onto the rocks…ahh
yes rocks. How bad do you think I’ll
mess up the rocks?
No comments:
Post a Comment