Archive for the 'Old-timers' Category

Garden Club has a luncheon

Once every three years, the Animas Valley Garden Club hosts the spring meeting for the area’s three garden clubs.  This was our year.  The day before, we gathered at the grange and set up the tables and chairs.  The tables, homemade with folding legs, had been made by Ruth’s grandfather. 

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The menu was soup, salad, and desserts, and we all cooked the night before.  (I made cheesecake and 3 salad dressings.)

That morning we decorated the tables. 

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Each person got a little coleus plant grown in Jennifer’s greenhouse.  Ruth and I wrapped each coleus in waxed paper, and tied raffia around it.  There’s a poem about gardening in pink paper, and a lavender agenda.  The baskets of flowers are borrowed from Kelly’s store; the tablecloths are borrowed from a grange member who has a full set of tablecloths for all the grange tables.

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Miss Roberta particularly enjoyed the desserts.  She said that she wasn’t used to not doing it herself, but she certainly thought we did a fine job.  She said, I thought the club acquitted itself very well. 

Three things that are unfathomable

(This is an old saying from India)

There are three things in life that are unfathomable:

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the banks of a river, 

 

the mind of a saint,

and the heart of a woman. 

Garden Club

A few years ago, my then 92-year-old neighbor asked if I would join her garden club. Since it met once a month and she was getting to an age where she needed help with transportation, I said I would. Two years later, I’m the club secretary and Miss Roberta, who has been attending Garden Club meetings for over 50 years, is still going strong.

Most of the meetings take place in the Grange, and there are three or four women in the garden club who have been Grange members their whole life.

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The Grange is a place of rural pride, home to the 4-H Club and the Saint Patrick’s Day corned beef boiled dinner.

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It is part of the National Grange system of 3,600 Granges in 37 states, with an American flag out front.

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Roberta and her late husband Robert are both Past Masters of the Grange, with their picture on the wall.

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This is the Garden Club. Many of the members have been attending meetings for decades. Ruth was the hostess today, and she brought cherry pie made with her own cherries from the deep freeze.

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It was an exceptional pie. And Roberta looked like a flower

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but was pretty annoyed because she couldn’t hear at the meeting. She was the principal of two schools in her prime. Just last year she ran a bear off her property by yelling at him.  She is a small woman with a tiny jaw, but it was very firmly set at that garden club meeting. 

More on Donny’s sheep

Here are a few more pictures of Donny’s flock of sheep, and another of his folk-art installments.  This ewe is above the gate’s WHO,

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which resolves to WHO ENTER HERE

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And what you can’t see is that the left side of this gate, under snow at the moment, says ABANDON HOPE, YOU

so the gate to his front yard reads “Abandon Hope, You Who Enter Here.”  Which he’ll clarify is from Dante’s Inferno, written over the gates of hell. 

On the other side of the gate–the side that you see as you’re leaving–it says “Come Back Soon”, the existential Yin and Yang of farm life. 

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In the winter, the sheep spend time in front of the house: there’s a sheep shed to the left above the house and the barn is down below.  I have no idea how he managed them between dogs.  This Rascal isn’t even a year old, but she has star quality.  These sheep are moving along two by two exactly as she asked them to. 

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Ahem.

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Donny has an old-style flock: nearly all of his sheep have their tails (see the big sheep tail on the left?), and the rams run with the ewes so the lambs come over a longer period of time. 

And here’s a nursing ewe checking out the scene from the barn. donnyewe1.jpg

My friend Donny

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 My friend Donny was a neighbor in Vermont, a bachelor farmer born in the house his great granddaddy built, still farming the same land.  At 79, he uses the check for spring lambs to pay taxes like he always has, and raises heifers for a living; he mucks out the barn by hand.  He and I have always understood each other.  I’ve brought him cakes and fruit breads for sixteen years, and if I were 30 years older and born on a farm in Waitsfield, that man would never have been a bachelor.

Donny has had a hard winter.  He started using a cane, and went blind in one eye when a heifer kicked him in the head.  He’s always full of stories, and we talked for an hour and a half in the road. 

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And then he had to go throw bales to the heifers and muck manure. 

Donny has an eye for folk art, and has cultivated a curmudgeonly exterior for a long time.  Here’s an old story of his: sometime back in the 1980s, the Postmistress said that everyone had to have their name painted on the mailbox, including Donny.  He said, I’ve lived here all my life, and so did my daddy and my granddaddy too.  If ye don’t know where I live by now, to Hell with ye.  And he painted a name on his mailbox: Attila the Hun, now nearly faded away.

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Here’s another Donny story:  in the 1930s, a friend of his found a bear cub and raised it as a pet.  It was very attached to these boys, but when the bear was one year old it was too big to have around, so his father said that they couldn’t keep it anymore.  They put the bear in the back of the pick-up truck and drove it to the next town, and the bear was back the same day.  So they put the bear in the back of the truck and drove it to the next county, and the bear was back the next day.  So they drove the bear clear across the state to New Hampshire, and the bear came back the next week.  So the father shot the bear when it was up in a tree, and they had a Hell of a time getting it down.   

He’s had a good lambing season with two cossets, a new noun for me.  Those are the bottlefed lambs that live in the kitchen (one was a rejected twin, and he found the other wandering motherless in the barn)  (cosset-verb (used with object) 1. to treat as a pet; pamper; coddle. - noun 2. a lamb brought up without its dam; pet lamb. 3. any pet.  [Possibly from Anglo-Norman coscet, pet lamb, from Middle English cotsete, cottage-dweller, from Old English cotsǣta : cot, cottage + sǣta, -sǣte, inhabitant; see sed- in Indo-European roots.] )

His cossets are out of the kitchen now, and you can pick them out because of their dirty faces and the red stripe painted on their back.

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There was good news this visit, too.  Donny’s new dog is shaping up well, and seems to be road trained.  His last good dog died when I lived there a decade ago, and he’s been alone ever since–his pups kept getting run over by cars.  This dog seemed to understand the rules, and has paths in the snow on either side of the road.  Named Rascal. 

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And there’s a Plattsburgh boy in his early 20s living in a yurt, helping out in exchange for a place to set up his tent.   Here’s another Donny story:

Donny had <Misery Manor> carved into a stone on the stone wall in front of his house some thirty or forty years ago.  

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How much do you think it cost to get that carved, he asked.  I guessed $100.   $600, he said.  He saw me coming from a long way off.  He had just done a big job in Boston, 20 feet in the air.  

These are a few of Donny’s lambs this year

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and here’s goodbye, with him taking his cake up to the house before he gets back to work. 

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May you live long.

Everybody says “I love you”

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Today Maharishi Mahesh Yogi was cremated by the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers in the north Indian city of Allahabad.  There lies a man who loved flowers even more than I do.  

My husband studied with Maharishi back in the day, and received calls from around the world with his passing.  In some ways Maharishi was part of the best intentions of the ’60s, spreading the gospel that meditation could bring about world peace.  That love is all there is. 

A few years ago a friend brought up something I’ve been mulling ever since: whenever kids are dropped off for school or sports, they say “I love you”.  When there are three or four kids and a few moms, there is a whole chorus of “I love you”s.  We didn’t say “I love you” as a constant refrain to our parents, but our kids do.   With the passing of Maharishi, it came to mind that he and the Beatles weren’t just part of a  cultural revolution; they embodied a shift in consciousness, and perhaps that’s the root of the change in family dialogue.  World peace has been elusive, but these days everybody says “I love you”, and that’s a start.