Tuesday, May 31, 2011

THIS OLD HOUSE

          This Old House - Our Home

          Over the years, I've lived in many old houses and the one I'm currently residing in Fosterville is no exception - it's quite possibly the oldest one.  Like many old houses in New Brunswick, it consists of a series of add-ons, which most likely occurred as the family grew.  In earlier years, the number of kids were much higher than now; six to nine was not uncommon.  Nobody living in the area seems to know the exact age of our house but a 72 year old woman living at the top of Green Mountain remembers when she was just a little girl, it was less than half its current size and the front door was located at the now back part of the house.  There's a very old rusty cast iron stove sitting amongst the trees near a seasonal stream at the lowest part of the pasture and I suspect it was the house's original stove.  Since the house still isn't properly insulated, I can almost see the smiling faces and hear the wonderful comments of the first people living in this old house when they gathered around the newly installed stove - I'll bet they were elated, overjoyed by the heat it generated - wouldn't doubt for a moment if its sides didn't glow a bright red on an extremely cold winter night.
          Old houses like old men have their own sounds - they creak and groan - especially when a harsh cold wind is blowing.  Sometimes when I lay in bed, just woke up in the middle of a quiet night and am having a bit of difficulty drifting off to the world of dreams, this old house makes some unusual noises.  Sarah's teenage daughter Rachel claims to have seen a ghost in the kitchen and I was once startled by something I may or may not have seen.  As I was climbing the stairs, I thought I saw a slight movement near one of the bedroom doors out of the corner of my eye but what disturbed me the most was the eerie coldness I experienced; the hairs on the back of my neck felt as though they were standing at attention.  If indeed a ghost exists within this old house, I suspect it's not too concerned about the new inhabitants because we would all be feeling really spooked.  However being slightly concerned and a bit inquisitive, I asked the woman living at the top of Green Mountain if she knew about anyone dying in the house and to her recollection, she couldn't remember anything like that happening here - so that's a good thing.
          About half a mile from here along a well-travelled gravel road that slowly winds its way to the lake, the first homestead in Fosterville is situated.  A man by the name of Josiah Foster settled there in 1851 and sparse remnants of his home can still be seen; a large indentation in the ground surrounded by boulders that appear to have slid down to its centre over the years.  Whether these boulders were used for the foundation of his home or were part of the walls containing a low sod roof, I don't know but one thing for certain - his humble dwelling wasn't a stylish mansion - it was very basic.  At one time apparently, Fosterville was actually a little town, even had a hotel, which is still in existence.  It's located at the top of the hill at the crossroads leading to Forest City.  However, the big green and white building is no longer used as a hotel, the owners of the property residing there mainly on weekends during the summer.  I imagine Josiah would turn over in his grave if he could see the many changes that have occurred since he once trod this land.  Instead of big workhorses plowing the land and logging the trees, jet planes pass overhead as all manner of machinery rips up the earth and mows down the trees.
          Josiah Foster reminds me of my grandfather Joseph Dale and his homestead at Woodpecker, BC.  I'm hardly a pioneer, an old homesteader but I like to think some of my granddaddy's blood in search for a better-place-to-be and a better-lifestyle runs through my veins.  I certainly don't have the hardships, the bitter ordeals he had to deal with but I still have the aches and pains of old age and the desires of a younger man within me.  Life is much easier now than it was back in those days so I try not to complain about some of my hardships - makes me sound like a real whiner - a real wimp.
          My gosh it's beautiful here at Golden Unicorn Farm, now that spring has finally arrived and summer is hopefully just around the corner.  I love this chunk of land and everything that abounds here - well - maybe not the black flies and the mosquitoes so much, but I guess, like anything else, they have a right to be here too.  Our old house, by comparison to Josiah's residence of old, is a stylish manor and I for one am very thankful to be living here and enjoying everything it affords.  The place may creak and groan when the wind howls and snow flies through the crisp cold air and the ghost shifts uneasily from room to room but I was warm all winter long and felt comfort within these walls - I can think of no better place to spend the remainder of my years.

Monday, May 30, 2011

THE WEATHER FEELS GOOD BUT I DON'T

          I don't believe it - the sun is shining today!  I'm not the sort of person that gets depressed if its cloudy and rainy but I do know, when I see the sun and feel its heat upon my back in the early morning, its prominent presence brings a smile to my face.  For the past few days, I've been running a fever, sweating so much, my shirt was like a second skin.  And cough; I've coughed so much my sides ache and the amount of gooey stuff that's been oozing out of my nostrils would put an ox to shame.  I'm the type of man who doesn't believe too much in taking pharmaceutical concoctions and pills to remedy what ails me so I knocked back a few hot whiskeys and soaked in a tub full of hot water until I was redder than a boiled lobster.  At the moment, I sort of feel like I'm on the way to recovery - not sure if I should do too much physical work today - I'm one of those sort of guys that pushes himself to the limit and then beyond.  If I was feeling 100%, I'd trek on up over Green Mountain to where a large slab of concrete was dumped off into a ditch; take a chisel and a sledge hammer, score the concrete into big squares and then break the sections off - the barn I'm going to be building soon is in need of a strong foundational support - apparently the frost can be a real problem.
          I received a rather lengthy and very informative email from a friend of mine by the name of Ian who lives in Nanaimo, BC.  He told me that instead of the stories I'd been writing over the winter months, he was more interested in reading my journalistic writings; my day to day living experiences at Golden Unicorn Farm.  I've known Ian for many years and although we were never really close friends, there has always been a camaraderie between us; a sharing of appreciative mutual talents.  I never knew he had a brother with the same age difference of 8 years as my brother and I and that like us, they had never grown up together.  It's nice when something I've written hits home with someone else because even though Ian and I are now thousands of miles apart, I now somehow feel closer to him than when we lived only a few short miles apart.
          The weather today has turned from windy and rainy to warm and muggy, which weather wise is fine but within probably only short hours, if not sooner, the air will be filled with a multitude of black flies and mosquitoes - apparently the birds, frogs and the bats haven't been able to contain them.  The black flies are undoubtedly the worst and unfortunately they just love to feast on me.  I didn't think they were worse than mosquitoes but my face looks like it did when I was a teenage boy - swollen bites that look like big red pimples and oh how they itch.  I tried not to scratch at them but like a flea to a dog; I couldn't help scratching, which of course only inflames the bites and makes them even worse.  I can see, that if I do anything outdoors today, I shall have to wear the mosquito netting over my head, which a person would think, since it's a mesh, it wouldn't feel that uncomfortable.  However, even though tiny holes exist all through the netting, my breath makes it fee hot and stuffy.
          My friends George and Margaret who immigrated from Germany many years ago have given me several glasses of their homemade black currant and raspberry wine whenever I've visited them.  I was so impressed with the flavour I asked for some cuttings from their bushes and have since replanted them here at the far end of our soon to be garden.  I'm pleased to say that they've all taken to their new locations and are coming along splendidly.  Since there are still quite a few cuttings remaining, I'm going to replant them at a couple of different locations on the acreage - whether or not we will ever harvest them - I know the wild birds will enjoy their tastiness and I can hardly wait until I get the recipe to make my own homemade black currant and raspberry wine.
          Although I'm feeling much better than yesterday, just sitting here at the computer, by the feel of my sweating brow and damp shirt, I can tell I still haven't totally recovered.  I was hoping to do some work outside but since it's probably not a good idea to exert myself too much, I think I'll work on designing some postcards of the Fosterville area and some of my artwork and put them up for sale in my wife's wee coffee shop, which incidentally is becoming an increasing hit with the locals. I've still got more wire to stretch, a barn to build and a garden to put in, so if I take the next day or two to fully recover, I think I'll be doing myself a big favour - besides if I get really ill, none of the things which have to be completed soon will be completed and I know besides me, the dog, goats and chickens will be really disappointed.      

Sunday, May 29, 2011

NOAH AND ME - 2 SAILORS ONCE UPON A SEA

          The last two Sundays I went to church with my brother Larry when he visited us for a little over a week.  Not being a very religious person, many years had passed by since I'd stepped inside a church just to listen to the sermon, sing some hymns and bow my head in prayer.  I didn't feel the least uncomfortable as I stood next to my big brother and sang off key, at the same time listening to some other people standing behind us; their voices cheerful, melodic and on key as they sang their hearts out.  The Baptist church was small, sunlight streaming through a stain glass window depicting Jesus praying, its pastor aged, friendly and a touch forgetful, the congregation somewhat sparse and respectful; a distinct aura of reverence abounding  but not in a stilted or regimented manner - no - more casual, relaxed - a contentment prevailing.
          The sermons were about Noah, apparently one of two such men who have actually walked with God.  The sermons seemed fitting for our times; tsunamis roaming about the Pacific on a regular basis and sea levels rising higher and higher at an alarming rate.  It's been raining quite often this spring; like winter's snow, it seems never ending.  However, that being said, it's hard to imagine rain pouring out of the sky for 40 days and 40 nights until not a living soul was left alive other than Noah, his sons, their wives and the animals he'd brought on board the ark.  I have been to sea on a small sailboat and looking back to that time when a couple of friends and I sailed across the North Pacific Ocean towards the Aleutian Islands, I can remember seeing nothing but water and sky for many days; the power of the ocean beyond imagination; I was in complete awe.  And that's just the movement of the ocean I was experiencing - imagine the Earth, its size and weight twirling on a fragile axis while at the same time sailing through space around a gigantic fiery star; the sun;  two wee grains of sand amidst a seemingly endless Universe.  I'm sure I must have felt much the same as Noah when he watched all the land disappear until miraculously, the tip of a mountain comes into view on the horizon - land ho!
          A mighty power exists all around us; whether a God-like power or a natural phenomenon; it's still an immense power we shouldn't take for granted or try bending to our ways because its strength is indomitably bigger than us.  A great many people scoff at churches and religious values but whether a person is a believer or not, it certainly doesn't hurt to give thanks that we've been allowed to exist here, if even for only a short period of time; this beautiful planet Earth and all the resources it contains to fulfill our needs is truly a miracle.  I think that's why I'm perhaps saddened when I witness first hand the senseless destruction, the outrageous rape of our planet - like spoiled children, we think we have the right to take whatever we feel like and give nothing back in return.  Unfortunately, whether a rapture occurs and the good people are lifted up to heaven by God or the Earth as we know it comes to an end - nothing is free - there's an eventual reckoning that will be paid in full; like it or not.
          I haven't slept very well the past few days; fighting a cold doesn't help either.  If I were to attend church this morning there is a good possibility that I'd fall asleep but that's not the reason I'm not going.  It's not because I'm an unbeliever either but mostly because I've been out of the habit of attending church on a regular basis since I was a boy and that's a bloody long time ago.  Not completely sure what I'll do today besides not working; perhaps I'll walk up over Green Mountain to visit a couple of good friends George and Margaret - seems that's been a standard Sunday occurrence since winter began.  If I were smart, it would most likely be in my best interest to stay home and try to shake this dreadful cold.  Either way, I'm not in any particular rush today and since it's almost time for Sarah to open her wee country coffee shop, I imagine coffee is perkin' about now.  That sounds good; a hot cup of java and I'm thinking the forest is much like a giant cathedral; I believe I'll take a little walk there - listen to the birds singing their hearts out - bow my head and say a silent prayer - Amen.                                                

Saturday, May 28, 2011

TO READERS OF MY BLOG

          Here I sit in my little studio, in my own little world, in front of a monitor, my fingers going clickity-clack all over the keyboard.  As the letters unfold into words, the words into sentences, the sentences into paragraphs, I can't help thinking about the people who visit my blog.  Some readers read most everything I write, while others may just be surfing randomly to see if anything I've written holds their interest.  If perhaps you are a first time reader and are reading these very words, I'd like to point out that in the Blog's archives you will discover quite a few short stories, which somehow began whirling around inside my head until they somehow achieved lives of their own and insisted that I type them out.  If you stay any longer than a click away from the next web page you visit, I hope that whatever you've read here gave you a little entertainment or had some thoughtful or special meaning to you.
          I've never thought of myself as being egotistical but I recently heard on the radio that poets are considered the biggest egotists of all - imagine that - I write poetry too.  When I think about it, I suppose in a sense that's absolutely true - why do poets and people like me writing Blogs think that whatever we've written about is so damned interesting and worthwhile.  I've also heard that writing is a sign of loneliness and in my case, there is definitely some truth in that.  Perhaps if one is not satisfied with the life they're in, they create their own worlds and their own roles - a silent actor upon a silent stage - listened to by a silent audience.  Occasionally, someone will write a comment about something I've written and I very much appreciate anything someone has to say - whether it's constructive or not - even if it hurts my feelings.
          Quite a few people have signed up to My Newsletter.  At first, I was trying very hard to amass a lot of readers in the hopes that some of the short stories I'd written might just catch the eye of a possible publisher - beg me to write a six-figure great Canadian novel - which by the way -  three such stories are well on their way to completion - although much like everything else I've ever written has never been published.  Can you believe I was almost kicked off FaceBook for blatantly trying to entice a multitude of people, which I might add were complete strangers, to read my Blog.  Even at this age and I expect as the years go by, I'll always have my dreams - even if they never achieve fruition, I still get a kick out of them - and hey - believe it or not - the odd one has come true and what a rush that is - actually had one nonfiction book, Arctic Odyssey, published.  To my loyal fans (I sound like a frickin' celebrity) especially the ones that have signed up to My Newsletter, I would like to extend my hand in gratitude for taking the time to read my stories, my thoughts and sharing some of my feelings.  If by chance I've offended any of you, which I know I have because some of the followers signed off My Newsletter; it was totally unintentional.
          Many people from all over the world have clicked on my Blog, which is something I find terribly fascinating.  Now I can't say for certain if the person squatting inside a goatskin yurt with a computer on their lap in a place called Ulaabaatar, Mongolia, read my Blog but they at least visited it, which to me is rather incredible - the Internet has indeed opened up the world.  Many people living in different places such as Medina, Italy, Perth, Australia, Dublin, Ireland, Bristol, England, Kuala Lumpur, Indonesia and Jumala, Latvia, to mention a few, have visited my Blog.  Closer to home in the US is Mountain View, California, Beaverton, Oregon, Fort Lauderdale, Florida and Las Vegas, Nevada; also in Canada, places such as Chilliwack, BC, Churchill, Manitoba, Toronto, Ontario, etc., etc.  I find it a little odd that except for the very few people I actually personally know who are reading my Blog on a regular basis, the remainder are complete strangers - they seldom leave comments - I have absolutely no idea who they are - can't even tell if they're male or female.  Not that any of that matters but I have to say, it might be kind of nice to hear from some of these people - if not a comment, perhaps an email.  Sometimes when I check back on my Blogs to see if by chance someone left a comment, I'm occasionally hopeful that someone from my past, perhaps when I was a boy, a friend of that era might just leave me a message - because my friends of long ago have all disappeared, it's almost as if I've never been a boy, a teenager or a young man.
          I don't know how many of the people who read my Blog are blossoming authors or perhaps artists but I assume if there are any, they may be much like me.  I'm a creative person, enjoy writing and painting and it's such a big part of me that it's impossible to retain this creativity for a lengthy period of time; it's just something within me that screams to get out.  I don't have to be in the mood to write or paint because I'm most always in that mood - the problem being is finding the leisure time to just sit and splash paint or type words.  To anyone who has taken the time to read this last line, perhaps you could take one little sec more of your time and click on one of the items at the bottom of this Blog: post more, boring or interesting. 
        

Friday, May 27, 2011

THUNDER AND LIGHTNING - NATURE'S FIREWORKS

          I awoke this morning to the sound of thunder.  The time was 5:00am, not usually the time of morning that I crawl out of bed, quietly make my way to the kitchen, put on a kettle of water so I can sit back and enjoy a hot cup of Goldenrod tea, which was harvested last summer, here at the base of Green Mountain.  However, I was not disappointed to be awakened earlier than usual; quite the contrary.  The deluge of rain pounding the metal roof with a dull roar was so dense, the ridge of trees running along the southeast corner of the property was barely discernible until it was lit up with flashes of lightning; the air, punctuated by a barrage of thunder so loud, with a little imagination, one could almost expect a troop of soldiers to burst out of the forest and charge across no man's land during a bloody WWI battle.  The bed was comfortable, snug and warm and the only noise louder than the roaring thunder and pounding rain was my wife Sarah as she snored her way through dreamland, completely unaware of the din outside our bedroom window.
          Today is market day; the day Sarah and I take her wondrous, aromatic, freshly baked goods to the Woodstock Farmer's Market, where over the past few months, she has gleaned many continual appreciative and satisfied customers.  Our way of life has changed drastically from what we were used to being - city folk with city jobs - so busy,  an ant looked like it was taking constant coffee breaks.  Although we don't have job-jobs, that's not to say that we are kicking back with our feet up, sucking back cold beers or sipping hot coffee; our daily chores have changed significantly.  However, since old habits are difficult to break and a source of income is still needed, we haven't completely let go of earning money by the talents we accrued while living in a city; I still create signs, design logos, posters, etc. and Sarah still creates websites for businesses.  And of course, like many city folk and country folk alike, we are like babies connected by an umbilical cord to their mothers, except in our case, it's the Internet; keeping in touch with friends, loved ones and relatives via FaceBook, MSN and Skype; a difficult addiction to break.      
          I like to think that I'm an adaptable sort of person; I try to fit into, meld with my background, not so much like a chameleon where I simply change the colour of my skin - no, not like that at all - I prefer to become an actual part of the circumstances surrounding me; enjoying the simple aspects and not getting caught up in the snares of complexity; that's not to say that I'm so compliant with my surroundings, to the state that I won't try changing things - it's just that whatever needs changing is in sympathy and in tune with the larger picture.  If I attempt to live on Golden Unicorn Farm with the ideology of a city person, I will become dissatisfied and my time here will be a failure.  Since I no longer live where cement, glass, plastic and metal are predominate but amongst the trees, streams, earth and rocks, I'm attempting to be more in sync with nature and not with man made materials; in short, I'm trying my best to adapt to this way of life.
          Progress, the speedy advancement of our modern civilization has left the majority of the population behind in its enormous wake and even the ones that have been partially to blame for this rampaging surge don't have the capabilities of controlling its immense power; perhaps that's why everything has gotten so much of control.  I once rode that gigantic wave of progress, making the tsunami that hit Japan look like a mere ripple and was quite successful as I balanced on its towering edge gaining properties and amassing bags of money.  However, I found out that as soon as I quit participating, became out of sync, I lost my balance and all of my accomplishments disappeared like mist into the air.
          Living at Golden Unicorn Farm, I find the needs that are necessary in life are the same, whether a city dweller or a country dweller; they're just more physical to acquire; the pace much slower; the results more attainable and for me more fulfilling.        
          The old barn up on top of Green Mountain that my brother Larry and I partially dismantled had a few choice old time relics inside, which, although not of much use, seemed too good to just throw away.  Besides two leather bridles that are in need of a good cleaning and a little repair, we found four padded leather horse collars in the same condition.  These are placed around the workhorses' necks when they are pulling very heavy loads.  When I think of it; it's kind of strange that a powerful 360Hp engine can't pull a truck out of a ditch if it gets really stuck, yet one big workhorse will probably do the job.  The way things are going in the world, the price of fuel and the pollution, the human race might be better off going back to the horse and buggy.  But I guess the days of horses pulling wagons, rather than trucks and other powerful mechanized vehicles, are long gone for good but in my lifetime, I did have the occasion to ride in a sleigh pulled by a horse and a buckboard too; I even remember a Chinese man selling vegetables from a cart pulled by a horse and had the good fortune of running behind a wagon carrying blocks of ice on a hot summer day and scooping freezing chunks into my mouth.  However, horses can be dangerous too.  When I was just a little boy at my grandfolks homestead in Woodpecker, BC my uncle Buck put me on top of one of the horses that was pulling a wagon full of hay.  I guess I must have spooked the horse because they suddenly took off up the dirt road leading to the barn.  It's probably a small miracle that I didn't get my head kicked off or was crushed by the wagon.  Hmm...maybe horses aren't such a good idea - we're getting a couple of goats and a big white Great Pyrenees dog soon - maybe I can teach them to pull a small wagon full of firewood.
          Besides the horse harness, Larry and I discovered an old buckboard seat attached to a set of metal springs - make the riding a little easier on the bum.  Under the seat was a large wooden pull-out drawer that contained an intricate looking metal jack, which could be used if one of the wheels needed repairing, a large rasp for filing a chunk of wood or the horses' hooves, a hone for sharpening a knife, an axe or a scythe, plus an old wrench and other miscellaneous tools that may have been needed.  Apparently, before the owner bulldozed the barn down, it had contained a complete wagon - now that would have been a real treasure - which reminds me of the optimistic little boy who got a big sack of manure for his birthday.  While he was scooping the manure out of the sack with his hands he said, "I just know that somewhere inside this sack is a real live pony!"  I may not have the enthusiasm or be as optimistic as that little boy but despite my age and achy bones, I don't feel that moving to 50 acres of pasture and forested wilderness that I've taken on anything I can't handle.  I'm looking forward to the future and any achievements I might successfully accomplish - after all, it's not all just about money - self worth has a whole lot more meaning. 

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

BIG BROTHER, BLACK FLIES, BLACK BEARS AND BEER

   Big Brother Larry About to Board the Jet

           My big brother Larry left yesterday on the big bird - rather than duct tape thousands of feathers to his arms and paste a bunch of tail feathers to his bum - he flew via Air Canada back to his home in Stirling, Alta.  After spending an abundance of quality time with him, working together and just plain visiting and reminiscing some of the past, he may have suffered from jet-lag once he arrived home, but I find today, I'm suffering a wee bit of Larry-lag - I miss my brother's company.  As I sit at the computer sipping on a homemade cold beer after working out in the pasture and de-winterizing the house, it somehow just doesn't feel the same - the word 'lonely' comes to mind.

          It's a sunny day here at Golden Unicorn Farm, the warm sun shining on my back feels good; my achy bones also enjoying the heat.  I believe spring has finally arrived; swept winter under the carpet of last autumn's leaves.  I was thinking of taking off my shirt while I was outside but even though I was constantly on the move, like a rock star's adoring fans, the black flies swarmed around me - just wouldn't let me alone - so I didn't dare.  Although I was constantly shaking my head and swatting at them, attempting to keep them from going under my glasses, I did manage to notice that the blossoms on one of the many wild apple trees growing on our 50 acres near the base of Green Mountain are finally blooming and awaiting the courtship of the honey bees.  Since this was my first winter in New Brunswick, winter forever clinging to the landscape like a lover never wanting to let go, spring seems to be a lot more meaningful; the pleasure of the opening leaves, flowers and blossoms are like candy to my eyes - sweet!
        Near the ridge of trees growing at the top end of the pasture, I thought I caught sight of one of the illusive unicorns that live on our farm.  He was grazing on the fresh green grass, every few moments lifting his head to check out his surroundings.  Apparently more than the usual amount of black bears, coyotes too, are roaming around this spring or at least that's what I've been told.  I've seen moose, deer, fox and porcupine, not to mention the groundhog, which seems to have taken up residence under the garden shed but no predators yet - only signs - a big pile of bear poop near the south east pasture corner post.  If my understanding is correct, the coyote has crossed with the timber wolf and the melded breed are supposed to be a lot more aggressive - apparently a pack of coyotes killed a woman not that long ago.  I'm not the sort that goes off into the forest with a rifle but I do pack a long sharp knife and an axe - not sure if I'd fare too well up against an angry bear or a pack of coyotes but I'd definitely take a stand just like General Custer at the Little Big Horn.
          Since I just tipped back the last swallow of beer, black flies or no black flies, I'm going to head out into the sunshine and carry on with my never-ending chores.  It's going a might slower today, not because my big brother isn't here any longer to help but because it just seems different without him.         

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

MAY LONG-WEEKEND

            Sarah and Me and Some of Her Goodies            
          The May long-weekend has come and gone and here at Golden Unicorn Farm, my wife Sarah and I are a little closer to achieving some of our goals.  Goals are important but they shouldn't be so huge or an unrealistic fantasy that they are unatainable - success being the key factor for one's self esteem.  Fortunately, all the goals we are trying to reach by the end of this summer are within our grasp.  One such goal is a coffee shop.  Sarah has been busy working hard at baking different varieties of breads, muffins and cookies, which she's been selling at the Woodstock Farmer's Market every weekend for the past couple of months and now as the "lake-people" begin moving into their lakeside cottages, we opened a wee coffee shop this long-weekend for their enjoyment; hopefully a fun place to congregate and enjoy my wife's mouth-watering wares.  I'm happy to say that it's going over very well and I expect as the population expands by our somewhat migratory fair-weather friends, so too shall our wee coffee shop.  Another goal we're attempting to achieve is building a barn, fencing a pasture and a garden area.  Although the work has been anything but easy, especially when one is at the ripe old age of several months short of 70 and my bones creak and groan every time I bend over, with the help of my friend Garry Clark and big brother Larry, the pasture fence is well on its way to completion and the materials of the barn (harvested from two other barns) is lying on the ground awaiting the big barn raising date, which should be sometime within the next couple of weeks.

Garry Clark and Brother Larry Building the Pasture Fence

           My brother arrived about a week ago for a visit but mostly to help me out; said, "We could visit while we worked."  He flies home today at approx. 6:00pm and I wished we could have had more of a relaxing time together.  However, that being said, I'm very thankful for all the nail pulling, toting beams, pounding in posts, stretching wire, etc., etc. - his arrival has certainly been a huge help.  We never grew up together, so I'm very thankful for all our times together whenever they should happen to occur or as short as they may be.  He's 8 years younger than me and as odd as it may seem because of our ages, we actually wrestled for a beer.  I of course lost but we had a good time chuckling about it as we rolled around on the ground, his strong arms almost crushing me.  It's too bad Larry will miss out on the barn-raising because I think it's going to be one heck of a good time - lots of good food, beer and laughter.  I don't know when we'll get together again even though he's hoping to come by again next year.  And, if that should happen, hopefully we'll be able to take in a little fishing, more beer drinking and perhaps a little work - just kidding Larry!
          Here at Golden Unicorn Farm. winter was slow leaving and spring has barely arrived - the trees are just getting their leaves and the apple blossoms are almost ready to open.  The black flies are having a biting good time and the mosquitoes will soon be here too.  We have a couple of swallows nesting in the wood shed and the bats have finally arrived but I doubt very much that they will be able to control the hordes of pesky black flies and mosquitoes.  I'm told they only last about 3 weeks but since I can't wait for warmer dry weather, I'll just have to continuing working - lots to do before the snow flies again and I won't have my brother to help me out any more - going to miss my big bro big time!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

"BIG" BROTHER LARRY - Loves My Bro

Everything here at Golden Unicorn Farm is coming along fine.  The black flies and mosquitoes have arrived; instead of fly swatters we use baseball bats to keep them under control – a bunt only gets them mad, so one has to think about hitting a homerun in order to do any sort of damage to the pesky critters.  Since they like to flit around a person’s eyes and mouth, I managed to inhale a few, one of them tickling my tonsils so much, I almost choked.  We’re still awaiting the bats, which at one time I thought were a nuisance.  However, since little flying insects are delectable morsels to the winged creatures, a highly featured item on their menu, I’ll be applauding their arrival; perhaps spread a few condiments about the yard so the wee pests are tastier for their palates.

"Big" Brother Larry 

Although the bats still haven’t flown in, my brother Larry, via Air Canada, flew into Moncton, NB a couple of days ago.  He’s from Stirling, Alta and had gone to Buron, Newfoundland to work on a duplex he’d bought about ten years ago; the foundation needed repairing.  So you can imagine my excitement when we went to pick him up and he stepped off the plane with his carpentry tools and said, “I’ve come to give you a hand little brother.”  I’m the older brother but he’s definitely the big brother and a hard workin’ sheep rancher to boot – if anyone can give me some pointers on how to get this little place built up and operational, it’s Larry.
Besides being a sheep rancher, my big bro was once a lumberjack, so almost as soon as his size 12’s climbed out of our diesel truck, he surveyed the lay of the land, seeing the pasture stretch into the forest and being a man of few words said, “Let’s go find the end of your property line.  Our fifty acres at the base of Green Mountain is narrow and long – only about 750’ wide at the turn of a road and about ¾ of a mile in depth.  He felt at home in the forest climbing over boulders and wind-blown down trees as I scrambled to keep up with him.  Mentioning occasionally, as he pointed to a cluster of tall evergreen trees, “They’re certainly marketable,” I felt a twinge climb up my tail bone and nip me at the base of my neck.  I mean, Lenny being Lenny, and Sarah being Sarah, my wife and I didn’t buy this beautiful chunk of property to knock down the trees for money – we’re just attempting to make our place self-sustainable – acquire a few animals, chickens and such, plant us a big garden – hopefully make a few bucks off our talents.  After following a blaze through the forest that a surveyor had marked we eventually came to a small tree wearing a bright fluorescent pink ribbon.  I told Larry this was as far as I came before and thought this was the end of the property but I was unable to find the surveyor’s metal blue pin that the previous owner had told me about.  While I stood next to the tree sporting a pink ribbon, Larry stomped around in the brush for a short time until he found the final blue marker and to celebrate, we knocked back a couple of cold beers and attached the empty bottles to the tree wearing a pink ribbon – like a bear to honey – I won’t have any difficulty finding that marker again.
Unfortunately, except for my brother’s day of arrival, the sun has yet to peek through the clouds – rain, rain and more rain – a cold wind has been howling as well.  However, despite the inclement weather we are keeping busy.  Larry constructed an eaves trough over the house’s entry way and where the shop door is located – so nice not to have to stand there fumbling with keys while the rain pours off the roof in torrents and down my neck.  Although it was mostly a drizzly day yesterday, Sarah and I worked inside.  As she went through a load of boxes from our journey out here last year, I began painting the interior of the enclosed porch.  We are planning to open this area on Saturday mornining at 9:00am as a small gathering place for the locals to visit over a hot cup of coffee and one of Sarah’s fresh home-baked goodies. 
Larry and I were hoping to climb “Heart-Thumper Hill” today and try to dig out some beams a neighbour said I could have for the new barn I’ll soon be constructing.  Of course they’re lying at the bottom of the rubble of a huge old barn, which he had bull-dozed and was going to set afire, but since it’s pouring, we’ll just have to content ourselves with some inside work.  That’s the thing about having a farm – work is never over – it’s a daily job.   

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

FIDDLEHEAD - THE STRADIVARIUS OF THE PLANT KINGDOM

 Ode to a Fiddlehead

Winter's icy fist relinquished
Birch, maple, pine ever reaching skyward
Verdant buds bursting with delight
So too, bristling cedar, spruce and tamarack
Raise stiff boughs once laden with snow

The earth warmed by spring's first sunshine
Gives birth to crocus, daffodil and trillium
Blooms dazzling with colour
A boldful extravaganza of exaltation
Greet perhaps the humblest of all
Unfurled, bowed in solemn prayer
Giving thanks for a new beginning
The fiddlehead

          Since the going in the forest is much easier, now that the snow has fled and the trees and bushes have yet to fully bloom their foliage, following the surveyors faded ribbons, I finally walked to the other end of the property, which is almost 3/4 of a mile hike.  The going is easy as I walked down from the house to a small winter creek, which cuts across the centre of the meadow and then up into the forest.  It's not until the old "wheeler" (ATV - all terraine vehicle) narrow road ends that the going begins to get a little more difficult.  The forest floor is strewn with moss clad boulders, some as large as a living room, fallen trees, some by man and others with age and of course poking up through a carpet of fallen brown leaves can be seen wild flowers and fiddleheads like the ones I photographed and wrote a poem about.
          Fiddleheads are the unfurled fronds of ferns, which are often found within moist and shaded areas.    Like the ugly duckling, once the fronds are fully grown, they are as beautiful and graceful flowing in the breeze as a swan.  Besides being beautiful, in many parts of the world, fiddleheads are considered a vegetable delicacy.  They are harvested early in the spring before the frond has opened and has reached its full height and there are many types such as Bracken, Ostrich, Cinnamon and Royal.  Each plant produces seven tops and they should not be over-picked because it will kill them so don't be greedy if you have a voracious appetite for their tastiness - maintaining sustainable harvesting methods is advised.
  
              
                Chicken & Fiddleheads - mmm
           
             Fiddlehead Sculpture - St. John, NB
       Besides the fact that fiddleheads are a tasty addition to a spring meal, containing Omega 3 and Omega5, are high in iron and fibre, they have also been the subject of many artists, like the sculpture in St. John, NB.  Because of its distinctive, curled shape resembling the end of a stringed instrument, such as a violin (fiddle); my way of thinking, it's the Stradivarius of the plant kingdom.  I wouldn't be surprised to see the fiddlehead's ornamental shapeliness adorning the bowsprit of a tall ship cutting through the Atlantic's frothy waves or carved at the head of a long staff in the hands of a mountain shepherd as he tends his fleecy flock.  There is a delicateness, yet a strength and boldness as the plant slowly stretches its head upwards and reaches for glimpses of the sun filtering through the high verdant canopy overhead.  It almost seems a shame to behead this plant before it reaches maturity but since I've yet to experience the flavour and goodness of a fiddlehead, I'm going to sharpen my knife and cut a few for supper - don't worry - I'll not be a hog and will make certain that the plant is not killed, so next year when the snow has melted away, the fiddleheads will return.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

SPRING HAS ARRIVED AT GOLDEN UNICORN FARM

          Yesterday, while I was tearing the temporary extension off the garage, I could hear thunder rolling across the landscape and reverberating off the hill tops; the sky suddenly turning very dark and ominous.  I never saw any lightning but I could heard the storm approaching from the state of Maine and it was coming straight at Green Mountain in a rush.  I had taken my sweater off and was nonchalantly sipping a cold beer but as a cool mist surrounded me, the first hint of a downpour, I hurriedly finished my job and put everything away.  The first drops of rain felt like kitten paws kneading my shoulders but before long, the sky rent the skies asunder and the deluge began; the tin roof on the garage and studio sounding like a Jamaican kettle drum band, the lead singer raucously vocalizing, "Hey mon, hey mon  Let da rain come down  Let it pour out its song  Wash away all my troubles - make everyding right - dat was wrong."
          Since the snow left a short time ago, the grass around our house, like the grass in the lower and higher pasture has turned from a drab brown to a lush green; the air is alive with the music of croaking frogs and they must be happy because the black flies and mosquitoes are beginning to appear; tasty little morsels for their long sticky tongues.  I haven't noticed any bats returning from the warmer realms below but they should be arriving any time now; hopefully keep the flying insect population down a little.  From what I hear the black flies and mosquitoes, many of them reaching the size of humming birds, are a real nuisance, so I best see if I can find the insect repellent and my hat with an attached net to keep them out of my face; lots of outdoor chores like building a fence, a barn and putting in a garden will begin tomorrow; I try not to work on Sundays.

      Garry Clark Unloading 100 Cedar Posts   

          I've been trying not to think about all the work that needs doing around Golden Unicorn Farm, because when I do, this old man begins feeling overwhelmed, almost panicky and that's not a good thing because sometimes while I try deciding which job should get priority, nothing gets started and time just drifts on by.  Since Garry Clark and I picked up a hundred cedar posts a few days ago and Sarah and I would like some better weather to invite our neighbours and friends over for a barn-raising, I'll make that my No. 1 priority, besides I'm still searching for a couple of large beams and about 30-2"x6"x12' long boards for the rafters and floor joists.  I should probably get the garden tilled during the same time as the fence is going up, since George and Margaret Probst who live on the other side of Green Mountain gave us some black and red currant, gooseberry and raspberry cuttings a few days ago; they should be planted into the soft, damp soil immediately as well, or, should the earth get turned over by a tractor and a tiller first?  Now I'm beginning to get overwhelmed but all of those things that were just mentioned need to happen almost right away.  Did I mention I have some signs to do too - have to start getting ready for our little coffee club on the May long weekend.  Jeesh - I'm already tired out thinking about all the chores and I've hardly started yet!
          I've been up since 5:30 this morning and I see by the old brass clock attached to the studio wall, it's almost time for me to start trekking up old "heart-thumper" (Green Mountain) go visit my friends George and Margaret and check out a huge old barn one of our nearby neighbours recently bull-dozed down and is going to burn.  He told me I could take whatever I wanted from the wreckage and I'm hoping to find the already mentioned beams and 2x6's.  However, from what it sounded like, the beams have already been spoken for and if there are still some remaining, they would most likely be at the bottom of the heap.  And to be honest, after tearing down Glenn McLean's little old barn, I really don't feel like dismantling a lot of old lumber searching for something that's probably no longer there; pulling rusty old spikes can be a real back-breaker.  And then again, I do find lugging home a lot of well-seasoned, silver-weathered barn wood quite appealing, so I can perhaps make some touristy nick-knacks during my snowed-in winter days to sell next year.  Summer has yet to arrive and I can't believe I'm already looking forward to winter's arrival - but I am - won't be so much work to do then! 
     

Saturday, May 7, 2011

HERE'S TO MOTHER'S DAY - TO MOM'S NO LONGER HERE

A Flower for Me Moms on Mom's Day

           Tomorrow is Mother's Day and that day conjurs up a lot of happy memories for me and how fortunate was I - I didn't have just one mom - I had two.  My natural mother's name is Louise and my step mother's name is Alice and although Alice mostly raised me and they were very different women in appearance and mannerisms, they both treated me very good over all - any spankings or verbal blasts were mostly well warranted - let's just say I wasn't always the ideal little curly-headed boy.  Like my dad, both my moms have passed away - I've been an orphan for a few years now.  However, although they're gone, Mother's Day is still a special day to me, after all, the mothers' of my children are just as special - for someone who never really wanted any kids when I was younger - how I wound up with five girls and one boy is beyond me - so happy Mom's Day to My Special Moms.
Misty, our little white Maltese/Bijon dog died a few years ago and the whole family, needless to say, was extremely sad.  Sooner or later, everyone experiences a death in the family; even a pet, often times being an integral part.  Each of us, although we hug and try to comfort one another when a death occurs, we eventually have to deal with it in our own way.  Being quite a bit older than my wife Sarah and her two daughters, death has visited me on numerous occasions – many close relatives and friends having passed on – some of them very tragic and sudden.  What I’ve discovered to help me through these sad and emotional times is a little camera, which I keep stored away inside my mind.  Over the years, it’s snapped many photos of people I've cherished and those little moments which were captured can be replayed whenever I want to relive that time with them again.  Although sometimes the tears flow when I relive those moments, there are far more smiles and I sometimes even break out in loud laughter.
My father and mother divorced when I was very young.  Since I didn’t live with my mother, only saw her on holidays while growing up, it was always somewhat of an emotional experience for me to say good-bye when the time came for me to return home.  Unlike now, with everyday use of emails and cell phones, for me, the main source of communication was primarily hand-written letters, especially if any long distance was involved and this was how I mainly kept in touch with my mother. 
            One day, after my mother’s death, while I was going through some of my personal stuff, I came across a letter I’d written to her and for one reason or another had forgotten to post it.  After reading the letter, I was prompted to write her once again as I visualized some of the moments my little mind’s-eye camera had captured of her.  I guess in a way, this letter is my way of dealing with her death, not so much in saying a final good-bye but perhaps more importantly, hopefully saying hello to her sometime in the future.
              
 Dear Mom

I don’t know where the time has gone; a great many years have passed since we were last in touch.  It’s not that you haven’t been on my mind mom nor missed, because seldom does a day go by that I don’t think about you and what you mean to me. 
I remember when I was just a boy, five years of age; I went to live with my dad (something unusual for that era, since the kids mainly remained with their mothers rather than the fathers after a divorce).  Although my new surroundings would soon be very different from the one room log cabin we were living at Woodpecker, BC, I’ve never forgotten that little cabin or the day my dad arrived.  I was outside playing in the melting snow, the narrow roadway leading to the cabin, muddy and rutted, when I saw my dad, wearing a heavy overcoat and a cocked fedora, crouch down, smile and begin clapping his hands, beckoning me towards him.  I remember feeling very happy as I ran towards him and how good it felt when he lifted me up in his strong arms.  Of course I was very young and unaware of the reason he came, most likely just thought he was coming home from work after being away for a long time, which was often the case.  It felt strange later that day, when my dad and I were on a Greyhound bus destined for Vancouver when he said, “You’ll have a new mother and you can call her mom if you like?  (What was wrong with the mom I had, I wondered?).  Also, you’ll have two new sisters to play with.” 
To this day, I can still see my step mom and her two girls standing in the living room beside the front door when we walked into the house.  They were all smiling but I could still feel the awkwardness of the situation. 
You have no idea how much I missed you mom and the many nights I silently cried myself to sleep over the years.  But what I remember most is feeling so excited when I came home from school and found an envelope addressed to me; of course a shiny dime or a quarter always arrived with the letter.  To be honest mom, during those early years of growing up, I’m not sure if your letters or the money I received with them gave me more incentive to write back, but regardless, we exchanged many letters over my childhood years and beyond.
Although we never lived together again, I want you to know mom that I loved you very much and the excitement I felt when summer holidays arrived was indescribable.  Because it was then that we went to my grand folk’s wilderness homestead along the Fraser River, which wasn’t too far from the little cabin where we had once lived together.  I loved those summer interludes, tromping through the forest with a .22 rifle in my hand, grouse and rabbits fluttering and scurrying for cover.  It still amazes me to this day, how I stomped about with no substantial trails to follow and never got lost – maybe the reason was King, the part collie dog accompanying me; he of course knew the way home and I probably just naturally followed along.  I was basically a Vancouver city boy by then – hardly a country lad.  I can’t say I ever felt worried wandering around in the bush except maybe the time I came across a bog because the black mud and water was still dripping off the branches and leaves - it had obviously just been used as a bathtub that hot summer day to cool off a big, old bear.  I remember being very alert; eyes and ears wide open as I carefully made my way back to the big, two-story log house overlooking the river.  Yes, being with you those summers mom were some of the best times of my life and if it were at all possible, I would love to return, if only for one day.
I also remember when I was a young boy around the age of eight, dad telling me that you were in Vancouver and staying at a hotel.  When we went to visit you, it seemed to take forever to get there, transferring from one streetcar to the next.  And I have to admit; I was really amazed to see such a huge hotel overlooking the undulating, well-manicured, green lawns that surrounded it; I must have thought you were really rich.  I have no recollection of what was said during our short visit, sitting on what seemed to be a park bench under a large shady tree but you have no idea how shocked I was, when as a young man, I came to visit you there again.  This time, a bus instead of a streetcar stopped in front of the same wooden park bench and extensive green lawns.  However, it wasn’t a hotel where you were staying, but Riverview/Essondale, a place for mentally disturbed people and for me, it was like a giant step back into time.  I was troubled to learn from your psychiatrist that you had been there many times before, and sadly, as the years went by, how often you would return.
I don’t recall specifically when I began taking mental snapshots, something special to hold onto, but over the many years of visiting you mom, I took many.  To this day when I bring them into view, some bring a smile to my face and often as not, others bring tears as well.  Now, that I’m definitely in the autumn of my years, only footsteps away from the snowline, I still think about and cherish our times together.  Not sure if I am just like you, which you once mentioned, but mom, without a doubt there is a big part of you that is a big part of me.  You certainly had a wicked smile and how your vivid blue eyes sparkled; even with age, you were still a beautiful woman to behold.  People often used to tell me that I look younger than my age and I guess I have you to thank for that trait.
I’m not sure if you know how I’ve been doing over the years, and to be honest mom, at times, I haven't been that certain myself.  Some would say and some have even related that I don’t count in society – perhaps living on the edge and not having similar or so-called normal endeavours has something to do with it.  Being an artist, I like to think of myself as a rather colourful person, even if I am a wee bit of a reject.  Not sure if my personality or somewhat different growing up patterns over the years has been a problem but I’ve definitely made some bad choices and mistakes.  Perhaps, like you, I’m somewhat of a free spirit marching out of step; at least that’s my excuse for being a touch different.
Like I mentioned a little earlier in the letter about taking mental snapshots – some of the most amazing ones were taken before and after we left Nanaimo early one morning and proceeded driving to Prince George, where you were living at the time.  I sometimes wonder if you remember visiting me and my family after you quit taking your medication, which was meant to keep you mentally stabilized.  I can still see you when you somehow magically transformed from being a paranoid, vicious cave-like woman wielding a chunk of firewood like a club into a sophisticated and charming southern belle, complete with a southern accent.  You promised me a mansion and oil wells that night; even servants.  It was wonderful to see your happy smile and twinkling blue eyes as you twirled and danced to some imaginary music that only you could hear; you seemed so sprightly agile and oblivious to your surroundings, it was as if you were young again; your prominent limp, aches and pains miraculously cured. 
To me, the drive back to Prince George will always be a memorable highlight and to this day, I still thank my lucky stars that we actually survived the journey, at least as far as we got anyway.  The scene you caused on the ferry ride to Vancouver was slightly tamer than at the Chilliwack gas station but when we arrived at Hope - well, what can I say - you were really getting out of hand, much to the chagrin of the waitress and the restaurant customers - I never knew you could swear like a beer-swilling lumberjack.    During our cat and mouse drive along the Fraser canyon traveling at dangerously high speeds at one moment and then at a snail’s crawl along the highway’s gravel shoulder, at times bumper to bumper with a blue van, which you were convinced was out to get us; I wonder if you recall saying, “Leonard, I’m surprised you’re not asleep; you usually fall asleep when you’re in the car.”  If you only knew mother, without a doubt, it was probably the scariest and weirdest car trip I ever experienced; I expect my fingerprints are still on the dashboard and anything else that I could hold onto.  How we managed to get as far as Cache Creek I’ll never know but that stop proved to be your starring moment of our journey!  Instead of the people in the restaurant giving you a standing ovation – I heard snide remarks like, “Look at that lady; I’ll bet she’s drunk,” and “She’s whacko!”  I’m sorry mom, but up until you threw yourself down on the hot pavement in front of the semi that was attempting to leave the parking lot, I was still on your side.  When I bent over you on that summer day and looked down at you lying on the hot pavement, your blonde hair glowing, eyes mischievously glinting in the sunlight and your arms defiantly crossed over your chest, I had no other alternative except to call for an ambulance.  If I’d been able to drive a car, I most likely would have simply dragged you into your car, tied you into the seat and then drove you home.  When we arrived at the Ashcroft Hospital via ambulance (they didn’t need a siren, your screams were loud enough to clear the highway) and before a doctor was able to stick a huge needle into your arm filled to the brim with a sedative to knock you out, you managed to cause yet another huge scene. This was perhaps your crowning encore – I have no idea how that old man struggling with his wheelchair felt when this wild and crazy woman suddenly leaped onto his lap and planted a big wet kiss on lips – perhaps he couldn’t believe his luck at his age that some hot woman still found him desirable.
After that wild episode in the hospital, the years just seemed to slip by; I’m sorry I didn’t see you very often or write as many letters.  My life had suddenly gone from being busy to just downright chaotic – my graphic business, properties (including my home) and 17-year marriage seemed to quickly vanish.  After the experience of being almost a millionaire and then living on a sailboat, I’m sure, must have had some sort of an impact on my mental condition.  A series of girlfriends also seemed to slip through my fingers as easily as sand through an hour glass, which probably didn’t help either.  Through all my losses, mostly brought on by my immature attitude, I also realized that things weren’t going that well for you either, your physical condition was deteriorating – you often complained about an increasing pain in your hip and having difficulty walking at times.  When you were eventually diagnosed with terminal lung and bone cancer, I believe I went into self-denial.  Although dad had passed away on Christmas day almost 25 years earlier – now maybe you too – this just wasn’t acceptable.  I could scarce believe that while I was hoping things would get better for you, your husband was suddenly diagnosed with cancer as well. 
          I remember when I came for a short visit, I was quite shocked by your deterioration; how thin you had become.  However, even though your husband was in worse condition, I was very impressed and touched with how he fussed over you – it was plain to see that he was just as much in love with you as he probably was when the two of you first met.  Although it’s kind of strange thinking back, still to this day, I sometimes wonder how you really felt about him – if you truly loved him.  Do you remember when you baked him his favourite chocolate cake but neglected to tell him that the icing was made from Ex-lax (chocolate laxative)?  You sure giggled when you told me; you’d never seen a man run to the toilet so fast or so often.  Shortly after I returned home, I received a phone call from my sister informing me that her dad was on his deathbed but it wasn’t necessary for me to come and see him one last time because he was basically incoherent and probably wouldn’t know who I was.  Although I never once thought of him as a step-dad, I did regard him as a very good friend – you know how much we enjoyed playing Scrabble over the years. 
I still remember helping out with your husband’s funeral arrangements and thinking how he looked so peaceful lying in his coffin.  The funeral director had placed his well-worn, somewhat crushed, brown felt fedora alongside his bald head and he almost looked as if he was suddenly going to open his eyes and say good-bye.  The last mental snapshot I have of that sad time was when you watched me being driven off to the bus station – even though I knew you were in severe pain and how difficult it was for you to stand in front of your picture window; I can still see your affectionate smile as you waved good-bye. 
Because of your deteriorating condition, the cancer quickly spreading, my brother, sister and I decided that since I was just sort of floating on a sailboat, single without any real obligations, it would be best if I looked after you during your final days.  Strange, even then, I was still in denial; I figured you would somehow miraculously rally and regain your health.  I found it very difficult watching you gradually grow weaker and weaker.  It was great that my sister helped out along with some palliative-care women who visited every few days. 
I don’t suppose you remember me lighting your cigarettes or your bed catching fire a couple of times when you fell asleep with a lit smoke in your hand!  You know, I almost started smoking again after so many years because I’d often enjoy an occasional cigarette along with my cold beer when I took a break after digging in the garden under the hot summer sun.  For the most part, I’m sure the cigarette was purely therapeutic; it wasn’t easy watching you die mom.
  I guess you had your reasons why you really didn’t talk very much while laying in your bed, which I had moved downstairs into the living room so you could see the kids playing in the park across the street and the mountains in the distance.  Fortunately, you weren’t in much pain, just not very talkative.  Even though things seemed to be steadily digressing, I wasn’t surprised at your tenacity when much to the astonishment of the caregivers you said, “Leonard, take me to the park.  I want to have a shower.”  You were quite a sight dressed in your long white nightgown and black rubber boots as I half carried you outside to the stairs leading down to the front yard.  I guess you must have realized, since you were already out of breath after just a few steps, that you didn’t have the strength to walk across the street to the park because you said, “I’m tired; can we just sit on the steps for a bit?”  I can honestly tell you mom, it felt real good sitting on the doorstep with my arm around you, even though I knew it would be the very last time you’d be going outside.
            The hot summer days passed slowly; I kept lighting your cigarettes and working in the garden.  As the seeds began growing and poking their heads out of the warm earth, I think I was fooling myself that the nourishment and care I was providing for them would somehow carry over to you and your bony old body would suddenly begin to heal. However, on the morning of July 3, 1991, while my sister and our aunt were visiting, my aunt yelled to me while I was pulling weeds in the garden, “Hurry!  Come inside!  I think your mom is going!” 
It was heartbreaking to watch you lying there gasping for a breath of air, your tired emaciated body struggling to survive.  When you finally became silent; unmoving; your mouth gaping for one final breath of air, I looked into your bright blue eyes, which were still wide open.  I hope you didn’t mind mom but I thought it only fitting that I should close your eyes for the very last time, especially since you watched me open mine for the very first time.
Well mom, I’m sad to say, this is the last letter I’ll be writing to you, even though I know how important our letter correspondence has meant to us.  I’ve no idea what the postage will cost or where I should send this letter, so I think I’ll just hold onto it and perhaps one day in the future, I may get the chance to sit down beside you on a door step across from a playground and look into your sparkling, vivid blue eyes and read it to you.

As always and forever, your loving son…Leonard xoxoxoxoxoxo 

Mom's are great; quite possibly the greatest people in the world.  We may not always agree with them but for the most part they hold our interests at heart and should never be taken for granted, that they will always be with us.  I miss my moms on this Mother's Day - no more fixing them toast and jam in bed like when I was a boy, no more giving them chocolates and bouquets of flowers when I became older and especially, no more hugs.  All I can do now when Mother's Day arrives is say, "I love you mom" and wonder if they hear my heart felt words.        

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

ON GOLDEN UNICORN FARM

          I awoke around 5:30am this morning, carefully nudged one eye open and peered up at the sky through our bedroom window.  Deciding whether I should leap out of bed (huge exageration) or snuggle up to my wife's warm body, I opted for Sarah.  However, I'd no sooner put my arm around her warm body and was listening to her snoring (sounded like a Canadian Geese landing strip) when little Jessica emerged from her bedroom complaining about a nose bleed (nothing serious).  After Sarah got up to check on the nose bleed, her warm body deserting me, I leapt out of bed (huge exageration), put on my old man's wool socks, which almost reach to my knobby knees, donned a short-sleeved red shirt to hide my monly chest (size of a B-cup bra) and then slid into my worn out faded pair of black jeans (gotta protect those short skinny lily-white legs).  After running a comb through my dishevelled hair, which still looked dishevelled by the time I was finished, I tucked it under my sweat-stained, purplish coloured hat, fixed myself a cup of goldenrod herb tea (which we harvested last year near the end of summer from the back 40 acres) and a couple of slices of Sarah's yummy homemade multigrain bread.  After I ate my toast, slid my feet into a pair of workboots that weigh about 50 pounds (huge exageration) tied the laces, which were long enough and strong enough to hold a 300 pound man kicking on the gallows (big exageration) talked to Jessica for a few minutes, I then stepped out the door into the front yard with a mug of tea.  I was greeted by a slight mist, as soft as a maiden's first kiss and as I sucked in my breath and looked at the foggy ridge I said, "So good to be alive!"

Golden Unicorn Farm Wild Apple Tree
          
          I'm sure Johnny Appleseed must have traipsed across Golden Unicorn Farm, across the whole countryside for that matter, planting apples because they appear to be growing everywhere, which I'm sure is a delight to the black bears in the summer and fall - a person has to be mighty careful where they step - could trip over a small hill of bear pooh (must be how Winnie the Pooh got his name).  I pruned one of the wild apple trees that are interspersed throughout our 50 acres the other day - hoping to get another good crop of apples from it this summer, at least the ones that are reachable by ladder and climbing up into the higher branches.  Although the apples don't look as red and perfectly formed as the apples all standing at attention in silent rows and shined up for your inspection at the local grocery store, they have the crunchy goodness and sweetness of any apple I've ever sunk my teeth into.  Unfortunately, besides the bears, the birds and worms love 'em too, especially the worms but hey, they just add extra protein and flavour to the apple juice we made last year.  
          I returned to Glenn McLean's place yesterday morning to give him a hand cleaning up some of the mess Garry Clark and I left behind from dismantling his old barn, which had been leaning precariously into the wind to keep it from toppling over.  While Sarah (home care's two days a week for his wife Edna who is feeling rather poorly) baked cookies and cleaned house for Glenn to sell at the Woodstock Farmer's Market, we ripped out a metal fence and posts that were well sunk into the earth, covered by fifty years of pig, cow and sheep shit.  Glenn's cheerfully clucking chickens followed at our heels gobbling up the big juicy worms and other delectable insects we exposed with each shovel full of the richest soil in Canterbury, NB.  Seargeant Major Rooster Red Head of course followed as well - I think he was jealous because his harem was spending more time with me than him - but I was wise to him.  I kept a vigilant eye on that sneaky rooster as I dug away and it was a good thing too because as I caught sight of him in my peripheral vision ruffling up his long white neck feathers to make himself look larger and about to strike out at me with his long sharp spurs, he backed off as soon as I turned around and confronted him.  I swear that rooster must have the brains of string bean to even think about attacking someone holding a sharp shovel - but hey, despite the shortage of brains - I have to give him an A for courage and being the best protector a little old rooster can be.  Hmm, when our fifty chickens arrive this summer, several of them being roosters, I wonder if they'll have the brains to outflank and surround me or maybe, and this is what I'm hoping - they'll be too busy keeping an eye out for each other in case their allotted hens fancy one of their feathered competitors more.  
          I had big plans for today to work out side and I expect I'll continue on with some of them even though the gentle mist has turned into rain - think I'd rather contend with the rain drops more than flies - they should be arriving in droves any time now - make the kamikaze attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941 look like a wee battle .  I've got a lot of inside stuff to do as well so there's no need to get soaked.  Ah, the farmer's life, a lot different from the work I used to do - I kind of like it though, even if the work is a lot more physical.  And hey, I'm not like many of the other farmers around here, who tend huge crops of potatoes, corn, other veggies and herds of cattle, I just have to manage a small garden and a few livestock - it's enough for this old man.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

CITY LIFE/COUNTRY LIFE, OLD COVERED BRIDGE AND BATS

          I woke up this morning; like most mornings, this is a good thing.  At my age, since I've already survived longer than my father (died, age 66) and closing in on my mother (died, age 72) it feels wonderful to wake up, especially on a day like today after the harsh winter has finally hit the road.  Before I climbed out of the warm bed and opened my eyes, I listened to the cheerful sounds of birds outside our bedroom window.  I've taken so much for granted over the years and my busyness of chasing my goals was so overwhelming, I believe I lost touch with myself and my natural surroundings.  Most of my life, although pretty much living, what most people would consider a free man in this world, was spent mostly in major cities encompassed, ensnared, enclosed by cement, steel and glass; like a canary, I whistled a happy tune within my cage - the music of honking horns, blaring sirens, roaring jets for a background.  My feet have trod many a mile down countless paved streets, along rusty railroad tracks, shady wilderness trails, pebbly beaches and the open tundra.  As much as I enjoyed the big city life: earning the big bucks, knocking back gallons of beer, dancing my feet off in cabarets, stuffing my guts in fine restaurants, exploring quiet art galleries and libraries, attending live plays and blaring loud concerts, I have to say the peacefulness of a countryside far outweighs the enjoyment I've ever experienced in the hustle-bustle of a city.  And it's not because I'm old and I've slowed down either, because the journey I've taken thus far, spent mostly in a city, I've always caught glimpses of the country life style.
          Work in the city was much different than here at Golden Unicorn Farm near the base of Green Mountain.  In the city, I lived by my wits and artistic talents; the heaviest tools I wielded were pencils, pens and brushes, unlike here; hammers, shovels and pitch forks are my tools of choice.  Instead of creating objets d'art, I'm now erecting fences, building barns, digging gardens and soon to be tending livestock.  There are of course rewards in both lifestyles and although I work physically harder here, I'm achy and stiff, I much prefer watching a flower or a veggie poke its little head out of the earth - somehow to me, it seems more meaningful.  However, don't get me wrong, I'm still attached to the city in a huge way - I mean here I sit, my fingers doing a tap dance on a computer keyboard and all the modcoms to make life easier still surround me.  Oh yeah, I'm still plugged in like a lot of other robots - can't wait to see what's happening on FaceBook, gotta check my email accounts and tune in to my Blog - oh Twitter Dee and Twitter Duh!

 World's Longest Covered Bridge - Hartland, NB
 
          Yesterday,  my wife Sarah, her daughter Jessica and I went to Hartland to take in their annual trade show.  After leaving Woodstock, we took the scenic route along the river until we came to the world's largest covered bridge, which is 1,282' (391m) long and built in 1901.  I'd been to quite a few trade shows before but they all took place back in Nanaimo, BC.  Although Nanaimo is a much larger place than Hartland, the turnout in Hartland was better - I was really surprised to see so many people wandering through the building and out amongst the farm machinery and vehicles.         
          Gosh, it feels like summer today; the sky is so blue and the temperature is so warm - it's definitely not the Fosterville day I've been used to the past several months.  Walked up and over Green Mountain this morning (a heart-thumper) to visit my friends George and Margaret and they offered us a large raspberry patch, so I'm going back tomorrow to clean up the mess winter left behind.  They're also going to give us some raspberry, grape, currants and gooseberry sprouts to start growing in our own little garden.
          It's been a long time since I've climbed any sort of tree but I managed to climb our apple tree and gave it a good pruning - only fell once but thankfully not out of the tree - my feet became twisted in the cut off branches while pulling them away and piling them into a heap - should be good nibbling material for the goats once they arrive.  Although it seems like we should be tilling the garden and begin planting veggies, it's apparently not too unusual to still get hit by another bout of frost and if that's not bad enough, especially when I hear loads of croaking frogs in the nearby vicinity serenading one another, I'm reminded that fly season will be arriving any day now.  Apparently the mosquitoes are the size of small birds and the hordes of black flies that are returning from wintering in Transylvania (Dracula's home base) are thirsty for the taste of blood.  Odd, although the bats will soon be returning as well, they are not the blood-sucking variety and much prefer to devour flying insects.  Last summer, I was thinking of ways to get rid of the bats because I thought they were living in the attic.  As it turns out they were residing beneath the metal roof and now because of all the tales I've heard about the black fly epidemic about to hit us, I'm actually looking forward to their return - must have a look this evening - I wonder if the moon is full tonight?