Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

19 May

Special Flower Art Show. Explorations In Peace Of Mind, Bedlam Farm Journal, May 19, 2024. Meet Erin, A New Flower Connection

by Jon Katz

 

 

From Hickory Wind Farm, an Iris for the garden bed.

 

I don’t know the names of most of these flowers, but I love their colors.

I’m unsure what this is; it’s the softest yellow I’ve seen.

This is a dream flower. It makes me dream.

A fresh kind of red, another unfamiliar flower with great beauty.

I am not obsessed with floral names, as it is obvious, but if anyone knows what these flowers are, please feel free to post a message. Thanks. I don’t know.

___

Meet Erin (below),  the newest member of my floral community.

Erin, who shares my love for vibrant colors, brings a diverse array of beautiful flowers to the Cambridge Farmers Market, now open for the summer. I was thrilled to add some of her blooms to my photo collection today.

With Erin’s Flower Farm in Greenwich, N.Y., I have some great flower suppliers to choose from as I prepare my garden beds.

My garden bed will come alive in a few weeks, weather-wise. She’s a great addition to my flower photography and a great source of beautiful flowers for my beds.

Erin joins Sue from Cambridge Foriest, Anne From Hickory Hills Farm, and Judy Pase. I have high hopes for this year’s garden bed. I got a beautiful Iris from Anne today and some excellent colors from Aaron.

 

 

19 May

Genius Story: From Abriel Garcia Marquez’s Wonderful Autobiography, Which Has Captured Me. The Story of Century Old Parrot Lorenzo el Magnifico And An Outraged Runaway Bull

by Jon Katz

It’s a bit off my usual writing, but I am utterly in love with the autobiography Gabriel Garcia Martez wrote before he died. Every page – the book is aptly called Living to Tell The Tale, and every page is more wonderful than the one before. Finally, I understand where this great writer – my favorite as long as I could read his books – got the imagination to tell his beautiful stories.

I want to share one short passage from the book. Marquez grew up in banana country, in the town of Aracataca, along the coastal region of Columbia. The city inspired the village of Macondo, which is the central setting for his breakaway book  One Hundred Years Of Solitude. This brilliant novel launched his career and, to this day, insofar as I know, has not been equaled. I have long wondered what sparked the fanatic and mystical writing that was his trademark.

I think I know now.

The autobiography is true, and this one passage caught my imagination and helped me grasp the source of his remarkable writing. I’ll just quote it, and if you wish, you can read it for yourself. I never stopped laughing.

In this passage, Martez recounts his birthplace as a small child. It was a prominent, sprawling place occupied by the family’s widows, grandmothers, sisters, daughters, and various ghosts and spirits. Here, he describes the kitchen, which he was rarely allowed to see or enter. It was the realm of all of the mysterious and fascinating women who gathered there, along with a century-old parrot named Lorenzo:

Another voice was that of Lorenzo el Magnifico, the hundred-year-old parrot inherited from my grandparents, who would spout anti-Spanish slogans and sing songs from the War for Independence. He (the parrot) was so shortsighted that he had fallen into a pot of stew and was saved by a miracle. On July 20, at three in the afternoon, he roused the house with shrieks of panic.

“The bull, the bull! The bull’s coming!” Only the women were in the house, for the men had gone to the local bullfight held on the national holiday, and they thought the parrot’s screams were no more than a delirium of his senile dementia. The women of the house, who knew how to talk to him, understood what he was shouting only when a wild bull that had escaped the bullpens on the square burst into the kitchen, bellowing like a steamship and in a blind rage,  charing the equipment in the bakery and the pots on the stoves. I was going in the opposite direction when the gale of terrified women lifted me into the air and took me away with them into the storeroom.

The bellowing of the runaway bull in the kitchen and the galloping of his hooves on the cement floor of the hallway shook the house. Without warning, he appeared at a ventilation skylight, and the fierce panting of his breath and his large, reddened eyes froze my blood.

When his handlers succeeded in taking him back to the bullpen, the revelry of the drama had already begun in the house and would last more than a week, with endless pots of coffee and sponge cakes to accompany the tale, repeated a thousand times and each time more heroic than the last, of the agitated survivors.”

This book will keep me happy and mesmerized for a long time, and there are 500 more pages to go. I’m so glad to share a taste of this genius and his creativity.

Even this small story is masterfully done. The best was yet to come.

 

19 May

The Zip Chronicles, Sunday: Into The Marsh. He Went After Something, Didn’t Quite Get It (I Think)

by Jon Katz

Zip’s hunting behavior is fascinating, and I never tire of it. When he spots a potential prey, he transforms into a statue, his movements slow and deliberate. On this particular occasion, he was perched on my lap, his attention drawn to a movement in the distant marsh.

He froze, crouched, and moved to the stone wall. He walked silently over it and onto some brush below. He was out of sight for a while, but I knew he was heading to the marsh, hunting paradise for a cat like him.

Zip has become a skillful and lethal hunger. He sees every movement on the farm and is patient, silent, and wicked smart.

 

Then I got up with my big lens and walked over to the stone wall. I assumed he was heading for the marsh, home to birds, snakes, moles, frogs, and mice. I waited and saw a black tail stick up.

 

Zip was close. He jumped several times in the wet and thick marsh, but I don’t think he caught anything. A few minutes later, he came back out of the marsh and jumped back into my lap to finish getting cratched and stroked.

19 May

Triumph: Some Bird Photos. Patience and Time. I Don’t Have A Lot Of Either

by Jon Katz

As you may know, I’ve been struggling with my giant bird and nature lens – a whopping 100-400  mm that weighs a ton. I’m no good with tripods, and I need to move the camera faster. I must hold it firmly and wait for something to fly into it.

So I have to take time and a lot of patience; I have little of either. I could fall over dragging that lens around, but I’m stubborn about my photography; perhaps I will become more patient.

I’m figuring it out because photography has taught me not to quit.

I sat for 45 minutes with Zip this afternoon, holding the lens until my arms ached. I didn’t realize I’d caught a shot (above) that I loved and another that I liked a lot. I could see them more clearly on the computer. This is encouraging; I won’t quit on it. The lens, for all of its weight, is a wonderful lens.

The second bird is below. The focus on these shots is a killer with such a big lens.

19 May

Images Of Peace And Calm: Bedlam Farm Journal, Sunday, May 19. Beauty Is A Stream. When Strong Emotions Rise

by Jon Katz

When my mind is carried away by pain and hurt – which it often is – I have learned that it helps me pause, think, breathe, and wait a bit.  If the painful emotion returns, I accept it rather than let it pull me away, hurt me again, or cause me to try to respond in anger.

I understand that I brim over with emotion, and I am learning to acknowledge and deal with it.

Time is a wonderful healer, so the phrase is a cliche; it walks me back to myself. I don’t like to feel angry or hurt or make anyone else feel angry or hurt.

Pain is a part of me, and so is hurt; I don’t want to fight with myself, either. It’s curious, but peaceful breathing makes the pain and hurt disappear. I can’t say why, but it helps me immensely and intensely.

Today, the beautiful photos came in a stream. They are all calming, soothing, and emotional in their way. I hope they break you peace and comfort. Here, beauty is a stream that never dries.

Back to the barn. We embrace rotational grazing here, two hours at a time, different pastures every other day. When Maria returns to the pole barn, the animals follow her.

 

Our friend Kathy Kelly sent us this tiny flower holder with a plastic tube. We both love it, and I put one of our wildflowers in it last night. It is a still life with emotion.

 

Zip checks out the world before setting out. Sometimes, he goes to the march, to the parch in front of the house, sometimes in the woods, sometimes in the Dahlia garden, sometimes out in the woods. He has fun; he loves to chase his tail. It seems he is out all night.

Wildflower, African Violet. I’m falling in love with wildflowers. They are not polished, produced, or bred; they just grow up and are themselves. Take it or leave it. They are humble and honest.

 

Grazing

 

A new plan in my garden bed, an Iris, one of the first planted for the season.

It’s time to get back to the Pole Barn. It’s time to go to the farmer’s market. Looking closely at the photo, you’ll notice a donkey is following Maria.

 

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