Sunday, September 28, 2008

completed circles.


I'm a little tipsy, and certainly very tired, so this will be brief and probably, grammatically speaking, sub-par (even for me). The other day I was driving home from work and I spotted what looked like 30,000 blackbirds swirling over a field by the side of the road. I stopped immediately, jumped out of my car, and started snapping as many photos as I could get my little shitty camera to take. Upon returning to my car I noticed that I had left my headlights on. I tried to start the car. My car stubbornly replied: "whiiirrr, whiiiiirr, whiiiiiiiiiiiiiir." No dice.

I popped my hood, retrieved my jumper cables from my trunk and, despondently took a seat on my front bumper. Almost immediately, a truck pulled up, out of which came a man looking to be in his fifties with a salt and pepper beard and glasses, bearing some kind of identification tag around his neck (indicating that he was, more than likely, on his way home from work). He walked around the front end of his truck, intending to open his hood, and asked me if I knew who he was. I said that I did not, but that he looked familiar to me. He then told me that about 4 years ago he had been walking by what he thought was probably the front of my apartment in Shepherdstown (he was right), and that I had given him a sweet bean paste treat of Asian origin that I apparently had extras of and that he was there (in front of my car) to return the favor.

He then gave me a jump and told me to pass on the good deed and continued on his journey home.

How cool is that?

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Does anyone read this?

Does anyone read my blog?

Monday, September 22, 2008

Aster


Something I keep meaning to mention is that the Asters are in bloom around the farm. I haven't been able to identify the exact variety, but it looks an awful lot like the New York Aster. Anyway, they are happy flowers that signal the arrival of autumn. That's all I have to say about that. I'm really going to bed now.

End of Sowing.


Today, Mary told me that by Wednesday we will be done with planting and transplanting all of our fall crops. This is a relief because planting and transplanting takes us (the farm workers) away from other things which need to be done, namely, weeding and harvesting. She said we just might celebrate with martinis or some other such alcoholic drink. Hooray for that.

Ugh. I can't write anymore. I'm so tired right now. I don't want to go to sleep as it's only 9PM, but I've been fighting the urge to pass out since about 6PM and I don't think I can fight off morpheus any longer.

More soon.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Hay bales.


I am really quite tired and ready to go to bed, but I want to get out a quick post about what I did on the farm today. Normally I wake up around 6:30, feed the cats, make myself a peanut butter sandwich (breakfast cereal just doesn't provide enough energy for the morning stretch to lunchtime), and jet off to work, which starts around 7AM. Then it's a clusterfuck of harvesting and weeding and whatever else needs to be done until noon or so, when I head home for a 2 or 3 hour break. I think I may have talked about this in a previous post. The reason I mention my schedule shall momentarily become apparent.

At about 11AM today, a plump, sun-worn, and slow-talking farmer showed up at the garden (the garden is what we call the part of the farm in which vegetable crops are raised) and explained to me that he had 2 wagons of hay for us and that he needed one of those wagons back by 2PM. In other words, we (Mary, the farm manager, and myself) had to kick our asses into high-gear and go and unload the hay bales. Normally, Austin and some other workers would be on the farm with us to help, but Austin had called in sick, and our other workers have pretty much left for the season, so it fell on Mary and I to deal with the hay. I knew right away that this new information from the old-timey farmer meant that my lunch would come late or not at all.

Mary and I rushed down the hill to the central area of the farm where we began unloading and stacking a wagon full of hay bales into a corner of the barn. I should mention two things here. First, this is the first time we have ever had to deal with hay bales as it's just not a normal, or at least regular part of working with the vegetable side of the farm. The second thing I want to note is how much of a strain on your muscles (back muscles in particular) it is to work with with hay bales. Another farm worker, Ryan, who normally works with the chickens and such showed up to help us, but it was still quite the laborious task to unload several dozen of these stringed clumps of dead plant matter. The trailers are about 12 feet long, (maybe 15?) and about 8 feet high. Use this to try and figure out how many bales we are talking about.

We unloaded the first wagon, then loaded all of the old and rotting hay bales from the barn back into the same wagon. The unloading part was hard, but the loading part was harder, for most of the old bales had rotted twine and so when you tried to pick the up, they just fell apart into a fluffy (and sometimes wet) mess on the barn floor. I'm sorry this isn't more interesting to write about, but I just wanted to get out my experience before I passed out.

Anyway, I actually got to use a pitchfork for one of it's intended purposes today: to stab and gather hay into clumps and then toss those same clumps into this wagon. It might sound easy to you, because you would imagine that hay is light and easy to move around, and this is partially true to some degree, but over time, the movement of picking up the hay and tossing it 7 feet into the air and over your shoulder, over, and over, and over again, becomes VERY tiring. My muscles ached after the first five minutes and we did this for 2 hours straight.

I'll finish writing out the rest of my thoughts about this tomorrow or Saturday.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Farm Photographs.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/hatmatter/sets/72157607316967251/


Unedited. And, I still have to go through and delete doubles and shitty photos.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Nothing to report.

I have nothing to report. Wait, that's not entirely accurate. Actually I have a lot of things I could write about. It's just that I can't bring myself to write about them at the moment. Here's a summary in keyword format of my thoughts recently. This will have to suffice for now.

Lorna in Japan.

Diablo II is really kind of lame.

Visions of Johanna in Egypt are fucking relentless.

I'm 30 and doing what with my life?

My hair, it goes, to where, I not knows.

Kimya Dawson is vapid.

Today I liked air-conditioning.

Natalia got married!

Kitties remain my standby.

The Tempest is nothing like it's title would have you believe. Boo to you Shakespeare.

Opera? Firefox? Sigh.

My kitchen smells.