The Farm Report
  • Halloween and the last bits of fall

    Halloween and the last bits of fall

    It’s been a busy October.

    We got pumpkins, but had yet to carve them. Tom had to scoot out of town, so Nancy and Mary Beth came to join us for one of the last amazing fall evenings we’re going to have around these parts. One of those spontaneous evenings you never could have planned.

    Neko and Mary Beth went to work on this amazing campfire scene, creating a fire pit out of kindling and spare gravel and a fire out of shavings from the pumpkin rind. We cozied up to the faux fire and got a start on pumpkin carving.

    Silliness, good conversation, and magic light ensued.

    Turns out chickens think faux pumpkin fire is delicious.

    103011_02
    103011_03
    103011_04
    103011_05
    103011_06
    103011_07

  • Strike a pose

    Strike a pose

    It was like Project Runway in our very own kitchen.

    Neko designed this outfit out of a piece of fleece. It includes many details, including accessories. There were also a pair of slippers, in progress, which is why you see the black outlines around Ellery’s feet.

    Ellery did a bang-up job of modeling. I can just hear my uncle Keith saying, “Look at that extension!”


  • Please remember

    Please remember

    I often think about what advice I will pass on to my children. Of course, I have plenty to say, but I don’t want to be that overbearing mother, so I’m trying to whittle it down over the years to just a few choice nuggets.

    Today I’m offering up one which applies if my children choose to go the road of parenthood. But it’s kind of a doozy, so you might want to get a strong cup of coffee or a glass of wine or something.

    Ready?

    So here it is: your child is not perfect.

    Your child, more than likely, is not in the 99th percentile—of anything. Your chances of that are slim. Take a moment to do the math.

    Some of us have children for whom this is obvious.

    They look different. Or sound different. They don’t say or do the right things. They struggle when everyone else is effortlessly flying by. All their Stuff is painfully worn on the outside for all the world to see. And the world sees, yes, they do.

    But most of us have the other kind of children.

    They’re as cute as a button. They do well in class. They usually remember their homework, even though they have to be reminded some of the time. They say please and thank you. Sure, they make some mistakes, but doesn’t everyone? We smile and call these teachable moments.

    If you are the parent for whom your child’s Stuff is on the outside, I wish I could hug you all the way from here. I wish I could tell you it’s all going to get better, but the truth is there’s a chance it will be like this forever. While that’s a hard pill to swallow, it’s not as bad as you might think. For you, many of the cards are on the table. You’ve already made peace with the fact that the child you hold in your arms is not the one you imagined back when you were simply anticipating their arrival. But I’m going to bet that you fiercely love the child you have. And odds are, they are wonderful in ways you never would have imagined. You just have to admire the view from a few steps to the left.

    If you are one of the other parents—you have some hard work ahead of you.

    Yes, you.

    We all think our children are perfect. We know they are beautiful. We firmly believe they belong in the gifted program. We suspect they just might be the most talented player on the team.

    But when the test scores come home, and they don’t meet our expectations, we wave our fists and complain about the schools. When the basketball team doesn’t do well enough, we grumble about the bad coaching and the disorganized program. When your child makes bad choices, or doesn’t get enough attention, or veers down a path of which we don’t approve, we blame those Other kids. You know, those ones with their Stuff on the outside.

    But the thing so many parents don’t realize is that all kids have Stuff. And it will take you some time—decades maybe—but you will realize that the child you hold in your arms is not the one you imagined back when you were simply anticipating their arrival. They might be a mediocre student or a terrible basketball player. They might not agree with your ideologies. At some point, every child is going to lay their cards on the table, and I guarantee, some of them are going to be real zingers.

    Even if it takes some time, I hope you will love the child you have. I hope you will allow them to be miserable at one thing but outstanding at another, even if it’s completely upside down and backwards from the way you had imagined. I hope you will hug them and hold them and tell them that, while you might not understand, you will always love them. I hope, before you blame someone else for your child’s missteps, that you consider the idea that maybe, just maybe, the crux of the problem is that your child is not perfect.

    And you know what? That’s okay.

    It’s really, truly okay.

    I promise.


  • Apples

    Apples

    This handy peeler and corer creates squeals of joy and delight from every preschooler who lays hands on it.



  • Chickenvision

    Chickenvision

    About once a day I pass by a door and notice the chickens staring in at us.

    Usually I feel a little sad that they’re stuck outside and we’re inside, with all the comforts of our home.

    But every now and then, I suspect we people are actually like animals in the zoo. I think the chickens are staring in the window, thinking, “Now that’s a peculiar bunch.”

    Those dirty windows? Please have a conversation with the dogs about that.


  • Drive-in

    Drive-in

    Oh, how I adore the signs at the drive-in.


  • Found in the field

    Found in the field

    Jackpot for my Nature Girl.

    (It’s a deer.)


  • Keith is in town

    Keith is in town
    092511_02

    Garrett is clearly the only one maintaining his zen.


  • Hobo city

    Hobo city
    092411_06
    092411_07
    092411_08
    092411_09

    092411_10
    092411_11
    092411_12
    092411_13
    092411_14

    While I was mowing the lawn, I noticed Tom and the kids working on something in the high tunnel (someday we really are going to grow things in that thing). They were stringing up tarps and tacking plastic sheeting around the soccer goal.

    They invited me to come in to their tent (I barely fit), and I discovered that a plastic sheeting tent produces the most lovely light diffusion. Really—every photographer should have their very own plastic hobo tent.