Many of you have been joining us in our experience of beginning a new life of farming and growing livestock. We are happy to announce that after many months of sacrificing our basement, our time, our energy and our sleep (thanks to our rooster) our chickens are starting to do their job! Please, please, hold your applause! Seven days ago we received our first egg. It was small and blue. Awesome! Raquel was insanely excited about it...so excited in fact that it slipped out of her hand and broke on the floor. She was devastated. She cried and cried and kept saying that she "wanted the egg scrambled." She recovered, however, the next day when there was another egg waiting for her!
This is it people. This is a sustainable, real, intensely satisfying lifestyle. This is the way we were supposed to eat.
14.4.11
17.3.11
What a Whirlwind!
The last month has been pretty exciting, pretty exhausting, pretty intriguing. Yeah, I know that last one doesn't begin with an 'e,' but it at least has the first letter sound... Yeah, I know that I missed the 'x' as well... Okay, I'm not perfect. Sorry I even tried!
Now that I'm done with my self pitying rant, I'd love it if you'd sit a spell and allow me to fill you in on all the goings-on of the past while. First, I'm pretty sure that I mentioned something about some rock-solid apprenticeship at Habersham Farms (name soon to change.) It all started on a cold and windy night... middle of the day...
Habersham is this super-hip, nationally renowned, award winning new urbanism-designed community in the Burton area of Beaufort. They have a downtown, with some restaurants, shops, apartments/condos, and a full host of amenities. They also have, in their long-term design, a 9 acre organic farm, which has, until an upcoming date as yet to be determined, been called Habersham Farms.
Well, the neighborhood and the farmer had a falling out, and decided to break ties, and instead of an apprenticeship being on the docket, I have a farm. 9 acres. Farm. It's going to be mine, sometime... we still have to work all of that out. Needless to say, with a farm comes a great deal of responsibility. Not only do I have to be present virtually all of the time, I also have to produce produce. Did I mention that I'm going into it with nothing besides a well and some pipes in the ground? Yeah, it needs a bit of work... and I need a bit of equipment, or a bit of monetary windfall... anyone have $10 grand they'd like to give a brother? That'd buy a tractor with the appropriate implements, fencing, irrigation, and some hand tools. And, nothing else.
Long story short, and by long story I truly do mean long story, which I may write more about in the future, or maybe not... I just gave up on that sentence- it was running on. Long story short, I'll have a farm, and I'm in the market to re-market the farm under a different name. Any suggestions? I'm looking for something clever, distinguished, and hip.
I'm also looking for a tractor!! Come on people! You can't possibly need all that tractor in your life!
Next time I'll write about Georgia Organics, and how stinkin' awesome it was.
13.2.11
Fortify our city
WARNING: What you are about to read is not appropriate for children.
A tragedy struck our chicken hotel last week. The chickens got left outside in their run overnight and an animal, which will remain nameless, got in and killed one of them. It got the one which was the most protective of the flock and we think she might have been a rooster. We were sad. She/he was one of our favorite chickens and we were extremely sad that she/he became something's supper. That day, when I called David he said that he was out tracking a you-know-who, but with no success. We heard a cry that day from the coop..."Fortify our city!" and "For goodness sake, don't leave us out at night!" We are obedient humans and have been faithful to put the chickens away at night since.
Until next harvest
A tragedy struck our chicken hotel last week. The chickens got left outside in their run overnight and an animal, which will remain nameless, got in and killed one of them. It got the one which was the most protective of the flock and we think she might have been a rooster. We were sad. She/he was one of our favorite chickens and we were extremely sad that she/he became something's supper. That day, when I called David he said that he was out tracking a you-know-who, but with no success. We heard a cry that day from the coop..."Fortify our city!" and "For goodness sake, don't leave us out at night!" We are obedient humans and have been faithful to put the chickens away at night since.
Until next harvest
3.1.11
2011, not a new decade.
I feel like, as we roll into 2011, we're beginning a new decade. I don't know why I think that... clearly last year we started a new decade. I suppose it seems that way because of all the new direction that is driving my life. Last year was a year of endings, it felt like. I ended my job with the Beaufort County School District. I ended my senseless working for money, instead of working for God, doing what He has sent me to do. I ended being afraid, although it is a constant battle. Maybe I just ended losing the battle to fear.
This year, though, is a year of beginnings. I have already begun placing my trust in Him, in His sovereignty, and in His provision. This year I begin in earnest as a farmer. There are some really excellent parallels between farming the earth and spiritual matters. First, there is the the entire farming metaphor- you put healthy inputs into the earth, you plant seeds, you tend them, and great fruit develops which can then be harvested. On a spiritual level, you nurture other people, help them know God and develop their relationship with Him, and then He "harvests" them as His own.
Important, indeed. I can't forget that God created the earth for us, for me. When I am out, working in the dirt, working the dirt, I can sense God in a more direct way. I've always seen God in nature- so much beauty must have a beautiful creator; I'm ecstatic to spend 2011 experiencing Him in His creation, working as a co-creator of sorts, albeit on a much more base level.
In pure reality, unaffected by societal pressure or coercion, 2011 is all about surrender. We can maintain a clean conscience because we are surrendered to God. Freedom comes not from following our own desires, nor from denial, nor from the perfection of the self, but from God and God alone. Freedom from our vanity, pride, perfectionism' guilt. Guess what- that freedom that only comes from God enables us to be greater than we ever could by ourselves, and we may not make any fewer mistakes.
Here's to you, in 2011. The new year is a time to refocus and begin with a clean slate, and that is a beautiful thing, full of hope and promise.
2.1.11
A blessed new year...for the chickens
Until next harvest.
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