Weather

Warmth

Happiness is not so much in having as sharing. We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.
–Norman Macewan

Two or three weeks ago a sign appeared beside a road near my house: “FREE FIREWOOD” and a phone number. Firewood is selling for upwards of $300/cord around here these days and I don’t have a truck for foraging deadwood in the backcountry, so I was dialing that number on my cell about thirty seconds after I read the sign.

The man who answered explained that he had just cut down 500 apple trees and was getting ready to cut down 500 more, and that he just wanted them off his property. And he lives within a couple miles of me! I said I would definitely be getting back to him soon.

Then I ran through the list of people I know who own pickups, trying to decide who would benefit most and be least inconvenienced by throwing in with me in this venture. The obvious answer was Steve: his parents heat their house with woodstoves, he has a truck and he lives just up the road. So I called him and said I could score us both all the free firewood we wanted, if he’d provide the pickup and delivery. He said it sounded like a great deal, and we should plan to do it as soon as he could find the time.

Of course, the time never materialized and eventually I grokked that Steve had no actual interest in picking up apple trees. I’ve no idea why he can’t just SAY he’s not interested, but I guess that would be too simple or something.

Anyway.

My friend Dee, who is one of the ladies in my walking group, came to check out my church last Sunday. It was a COLD COLD day, and after the service I was whining to her about how it was just plain wrong to have to fire up my woodstove this early in the year and how my store of firewood was never going to last the winter at this rate and blah blah blah. I lamented the apple trees, just sitting there less than two miles from my house and yet out of my reach.

Dee, who doesn’t have a woodstove and who lives WAY across town from me, said that her husband has a truck and that he would be happy to help me load up some apple trees. And three days later there we were in the remains of what was once a fine apple orchard.

We all had a collective “HMMMMMM……” moment when we saw the trees. For one thing they were older and bigger than we were expecting. I don’t have a chainsaw, and my little Sawzall was no match for those massive trunks. For another thing, they hadn’t been CUT down, they had been BULLDOZED down, roots and all. There was no way we could lift even one of those monsters into the pickup bed.

Luckily there had been people with chainsaws there before us, and they had already cut up a couple hundred of the trees: they had taken the trunks and left the roots and branchy tops. This suited me fine; I threw several nice stumps into the pickup bed and then started tackling branches with my heavy-duty loppers, cutting off the twiggy stuff and keeping the solid limbs. It wasn’t an easy job, but Dee and her husband and even her elderly mother set to work with their own saws and loppers with such cheerful enthusiasm that in about an hour we had a full load of beautiful stovewood. They said they’d be happy to come back next week for another load, and waved off my grateful offer of gas money. I promised to give them a big pile of steaks when our next steer gets slaughtered later this month, and they happily accepted that. WIN/WIN!

There’s an old saying, “He who cuts his own firewood warms himself twice,” and I’ve always smiled at the truth of that statement. But yesterday I was warmed in a whole new way. These kind and generous people saw a need that they could fill, and they immediately stepped in to fill it even though there was nothing in it for them. And I have a freezer-full of beef arriving in a few weeks, so I’ll be able to repay their kindness. That’s the way a community should work, isn’t it? Friends looking out for each other. People sharing what they have plenty of and receiving what they need. It warmed me even more than that new stack of applewood in my woodpile will.

Happy Love Thursday, everyone. May we all find ways to enrich one another’s lives and share in the everyday blessings all around us.

Categories: Friends, Life, Love Thursday, Self-Sufficiency, Weather, Winter | 7 Comments

Another Rather Blustery Day

Photos can’t really capture the way the Santa Ana winds howl and rage and try to blow the house down. It’s my second-least favorite kind of weather. It used to be my very least favorite until one pre-dawn morning last winter when my car slid off the driveway during an honest-to-goodness blizzard, and me and the kids literally almost froze to death walking the quarter-mile back to our house. So blizzards, now my very least favorite. But I’ve seen exactly one authentic blizzard in the seventeen years I’ve lived in Anza, and the freaking Santa Anas come back almost every year. They keep me awake all night and knock out my internet (any minute now, no doubt) and do their best to blow down every tree and dismantle every structure on the property. Last year my pumphouse BLEW AWAY. I still haven’t been able to replace it, but when I do I think I’m going to use concrete blocks. That third little pig knew what he was doing, you know?

This wind sucks all the motivation out of me; I just want to spend the entire day cozied up to the woodstove with a mug of tea and a good book or a cross-stitch project. And bon-bons.

On a less-grumpy note, yesterday I bought my first-ever pair of Uggs and I big pink puffy heart them. They are warm and soft and cozy and they are slippers and boots all in one and I’m wondering why I didn’t buy them years ago.

So to summarize: Santa Ana winds, bad. Uggs, good.

The winds are supposed to die down tonight, and tomorrow’s forecast is lovely and warm. I’ve got all my fingers and toes crossed for that!

Meanwhile, I’d better hurry up and post this before my internet goes down.

Categories: Family, Life, Weather | Tags: | Leave a comment

Haiku

Santa Ana wind
Strives to sweep the landscape bare
But coats all in dust

Categories: Humor, Life, Weather | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Random Snippets, And A Rant Or Two

Back when Elizabeth first began preschool, I used to go to great lengths to make sure she got off to a good start every morning. In the winter and early spring I would get up at 4:30am, start a fire in the woodburning stove to take the chill off, fix oatmeal or pancakes or french toast from scratch, help her put a weather-appropriate outfit together, and so on.

As the years went by, there was less work involved. Both kids eventually got old enough to pick out their own clothes, and they began to prefer stuff like bagels and yogurt cups for breakfast. At some point last year it finally dawned on me that they didn’t really need my help in the mornings anymore. Their alarms would go off at 5:15; I would roll out of bed at six, make sure they were both up and getting ready, and at 6:30 we’d head to the bus stop. The bus arrived at 6:45 or thereabouts, and I’d return home all relaxed and rested and ready to start my day.

So. This year. Monday morning after I took the kids to school, I hied myself over to the bus department to fill out the semester bus pass forms.

Except the bus department was locked, and I was informed that it had been closed down permanently. Busses would still be running, but it would all be managed from the District office in Hemet, and I would have to go there to get the bus pass forms and pay the fees.

That seemed a bit beyond ridiculous to me (Hemet is an hour away, and I never go there if I can avoid it), so when I got home I called the Elementary office to double-check. They told me that the bus drivers might be able to bring the forms up with them and collect the fees here in Anza. Hooray! Actual sense was being made now!

The busses were running very late Monday afternoon, so I didn’t hang around to wait for them after I picked the kids up from school. Tuesday morning we waited at the bus stop but our bus never showed up, so I drove the kids again. Tuesday afternoon the busses got to the school on time, so I located the kids’ driver and asked him about the forms. He said that the drivers would not be allowed to bring the applications up to Anza, the Anza parents would have to go to Hemet to get them, and oh yes, the bus schedules have changed. Instead of the morning pickup being at 6:45, it will now be at 5:59.

To recap: I have to drive to Hemet to fill out forms that could easily be mailed to me, and to pay fees that we used to just hand over to the bus drivers. Then my kids have to start getting up at 4:30 instead of 5:15, to catch the bus at 6:00, to get to school by 7:30.

Or I could just drive them to and from school myself, and not even have to leave the house until 7am. That option’s looking pretty good right now. Think I’m going to run with that one for a while and see how it goes.

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Late Monday afternoon the sky opened up and lo, a whole bunch of water poured forth. And it was good. It only rained for a couple of hours, but it was such a heavy deluge that everything got soaked good and deep, and there was much rejoicing. Except that the kids had ridden their bicycles up to see Steve, and now it was raining like crazy, and it wasn’t something they could ride home in. So I called Steve and told him that when the kids were ready to come home I would drive up and get them, and they could leave their bikes at his place for now. He replied that my car would never make it up the flooded driveway, and that he would bring them as far as the entrance to my property and they could walk the rest of the way. Because he didn’t want to take the chance that I might suddenly decide to go out in the the pouring rain and damage his beloved truck some more.

So…he was fine with making the kids walk up the driveway in a torrential thunderstorm of epic proportions, as long as he didn’t have to put his truck’s paint job at any sort of perceived risk. It’s nice to know his priorities are still in order.

“Um…instead of dumping the kids off in the middle of the storm,” I suggested, “What if I just promise to stay in the house while you drive them to the back door?”

He thought about that for a moment, and then muttered, “Fine.”

When he brought them home the kids had barely closed the truck’s doors before he was roosting mud in my driveway on his way out.

Classy.

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So, rain. Soaked ground. I’ve spent most of the past two days pulling weeds while the earth is still soft and moist, because the rest of the time it’s like trying to yank them out of concrete. Everything looks so clean and fresh now. I hope we get a few more late-summer downpours before the cold weather sets in — there’s nothing quite like rain in the desert to make everything feel new again.

I’ve been letting the chickens run loose the past couple of weeks; the dogs seem to have finally grasped the concept that they are Not To Be Eaten. It makes egg-gathering a bit more of a challenge, but they love the freedom and they’re a pretty sight wandering around the yard. And I’ve already noticed a decrease in the fly population as the chickens scratch through the horse manure and gobble up fly eggs. Win/win!

I have one more shed to clean out, and then I will be done with that part of my cleanup project. Everything else is just raking and pruning and cutting up wood into woodstove-size pieces, and all that neverending yardwork that comes with the property. I don’t even know what-all is in that last shed, but once it’s clean I’d like to turn it into a little workshop where I can keep all my tools and home-improvement equipment. I’m pretty sure most people don’t store those things in their dining-room hutches and pantries and wherever else they can find a spot to squeeze them out of the way. Five freaking sheds on the property and as yet not a single place to organize my tools outside the house. Does that seem right to you?

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Okay, I think I’m done whining for now. Back to the weeding!

Categories: Family, kids, Life, School, Weather | Leave a comment

Spring Garden

“To own a bit of ground, to scratch it with a hoe, to plant seeds, and watch the renewal of life – this is the commonest delight of the race, the most satisfactory thing a man can do.”
–Charles Dudley Warner

I’ve finally gotten all my spring veggies planted, and most of my summer ones. This has been an unusually cool spring, but I didn’t want to wait any longer to get everything in the ground. We had a totally unexpected hard frost a couple weeks ago that decimated my bell peppers and eggplants, but other than that things are looking really good. I replaced the frost victims with new seedlings and I’m keeping a much closer eye on the weather now, so I can cover up the tender stuff with straw should the need arise.

Here’s what my garden looks like right now:

As you can see, I’m all about the mulch. You really can’t garden without it in this arid climate. It holds moisture in, blocks weeds, adds organic matter to the soil as it decomposes, and keeps the plants’ roots cool so they don’t burn up in the broiling heat of summer. Gotta have the mulch!

I’ve gone in a slightly different direction this year with my crop selections. The more I read about Colony Collapse Disorder, the more concerned I get about the effects of genetically modified plants on the beneficial insects that come into contact with them. This has inspired an interest in preserving old heirloom and open-pollinated varieties of crops. The added bonus here is that I can save the seeds my plants produce and they will breed true year after year, unlike hybrids.

So I’ve switched from my usual super-sweet hybrid corn to the old favorite Golden Bantam. Instead of my beloved Hybrid Packman broccoli I’m trying an Italian heirloom variety called Di Cicco. I couldn’t give up hybrid tomatoes completely — gotta have my Early Girl and my Sweet 100 Cherries — but I’ve added Red Brandywine and Roma this year.

What I’ve planted so far:

Arugula
Beets
Broccoli
Carrots
Eggplants, Black Beauty and a Japanese variety called Ichiban
Garlic
Green Beans, Kentucky Wonder
Italian Parsley
Kale, two different varieties with really long names
Lettuce, several different varieties
Malabar Spinach
Melons, an Amish cantaloupe type
Onions, Walla-Walla and Yellow Ebenezer
Oregano
Peas, Snow and Sugar Snap
Potatoes, Yukon Gold
Radishes
Red Cabbage
Sorrel
Sweet Corn
Swiss Chard
Thyme
Tomatoes
Watermelon, Crimson Sweet and Garrison

I’m going to put in some pumpkins later; I’ve learned not to rush that. Nothing worse than pumpkins that are ripe in August and rotten by Halloween!

I also put in a bed of strawberries, but that’s a post unto itself.

I’m having the usual luck with my watermelons so far — which is to say, very little — but I think that’s another post too.

Here’s hoping for warm weather, no more frosts, and just enough rain!

Categories: environment, food, Gardening, Life, Weather | 3 Comments

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