Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

29 April

Pantry Support: For $5.26 Can Bring Precious Cranberry Juice To Three Large Families

by Jon Katz

For $5.69, we can send two large bottles of the precious and hard-to-get Happy Belly Juice Cocktail, 64. fl. ounces pack of 2. This is Sarah’s pick of the day for the children and families of the Cambridge Food Pantry.

Cranberry Juice is one of the healthiest breakfast juices for children (and adults). However, all kinds of juices are getting too expensive for the Cambridge Pantry to buy or obtain, so they only have a little sometimes and none now. This is one of the things that the children and families who come to the pantry for help love.

$5.26 goes a long way regarding Cranberry Juice, and since this is an Amazon brand, the price is low— it’s an excellent time to take advantage of that. It feels like every nonprofit in America is seeking funds that are needed; this help goes directly to children.

This is where the Army of Good comes into play. We specialize in getting the food pantry items they rarely get or consistently need more. We can’t meet all of their needs, but we can pick our targets and make a real difference to these food-deprived parents and their children.

(Above, Cranberry Juice)

$5.69 is a small price for getting a very healthy juice into the hands and homes of the people who are food deprived, sadly, a growing number.

I asked Sarah if there was a second choice today (there is so much need), and they said yes, they have also run out of salad dressing; the pantry is seeking Kraft Thousand Island Salad Dress, 16 0z. Bottles, Pack of 6.

Salad dressing is critical for getting children to eat their salads, which is, in turn, essential for their health. However, the pantry is also out of stock now.

I took the weekend off of Pantry food support; we all needed to breathe. But I’m back into it today with a whole heart. Your help has changed the dynamic of the pantry and enriched the diets and love people who could use a hand.

If you’ve been to the supermarket lately, you know why the pantry is so important, even in the most prosperous country in the world.

It’s important to point out how hard the community’s people are working to keep the Pantry stocked, functioning, and able to meet the growing demand for food help. I love this photo of 4th and 5th graders working hard to ensure food reaches their needy classmates.

These children inspire me. Hungry children are an issue that can still draw our divided country together.

 

29 April

Three Morning Flowers, A New Idea. Testing The Equipment…

by Jon Katz

I’m taking many flower photos right now; the most colorful ones come from the iPhone (below), and the softest and most artistic ones come from the Leica. The brightness and sharpest work well in the morning as we get up to work. I’m enjoying figuring out what the cameras and lenses do differently and experimenting with all of them.

Here are a few to brighten my morning and, hopefully, yours.

I don’t know what most of these flowers are, the red below is a rose.

 

 

28 April

Flower Art, Outdoors At Last: Signing Off, Sunday, April 28, 2024. Hearts Can Bloom Too…

by Jon Katz

This time of year, countless flowers begin to bloom.

I’m leavning that my heart can also bloom and two things have made that happen – love and flowers.

They just open something inside of me when I photograph them they are ever beautiful and spiritual to me.

They help to open up my heart, and my heart helps me to open up to the world.

Love is always possible, I wish I could convey that to others.

I was afraid of it, and when I stopped being afraid of it, I found it. Love is essential in life, and I learned that if in the past I suffered because of love, I could learn to love again, and have. Thanks to a lot of things, but flowers are one of the most important. Hearts can bloom too.

See you in the morning.

 

Shot in sunlight with my Leica SLR. Good night, see you tomorrow.

28 April

A Weekend Walk On Main Street – We Started At The Main Street Diner

by Jon Katz

Before my brace, I could not walk much for over two years.

Since the brace was made for me, I have been walking again, building up slowly but regularly. I love walking; it’s my sport, and so does Maria. We almost always walk together.

Saturday, on a sunny Spring Day, we decided to walk down Main Street, the preserved and older center of town.  There are no malls here or Hedge Fund ghouls to destroy the center in the city (they are gobbling up a lot of houses and turning them into expensive rentals.)

We rain into Jean, the friendly and hard-working co-owner (with Todd) of the Cambridge Diner, our new Sunday brunch hangout (Jean’s is just a bit too far and is always mobbed on Sundays). The very popular diner hosts special dinners eight times a year, and last night was one of them.

This is Jean, co-owner of the Cambridge Diner. We’ve come to love the Cambridge Diner; the food and service and the people are very nice. I’m hooked on their omelets. This, Jean said, was the farmer’s special night. She was planning 80 dinners, and brunch the next morning.

Jean came out to greet us, which kicked off the walk. Along the way, we met some friends, took pictures, sat on a bench or two, and talked about the beautiful architecture built during the 1880s all around us. This is a photo album of the walk, a special event for me.

This is one of my favorite houses in Cambridge, funky and full of color.

This is my other favorite house; I’ve wanted to photograph it for years. I’d also like to have this painting on my wall. I love the lines and design.

In my town, older people often sit out on their lawns reading. This captured the spirit of the down on a sunny Saturday afternoon.

This has always been a religious town. It’s full of big, old, beautiful churches, some emptying out. St. Luke’s has the design I like most.

The big merchants of the 1800s built several gorgeous mansions, including the Rice Mansion, which had just been granted a grant to paint and refurbish the building. It’s in the middle of town and stands out like an old jewel of history. They sure do not build them like that anymore.

Maria and I stopped at a surprisingly upscale consignment store on Main St. While she was upstairs looking at clothes (too expensive for her), I was browsing downstairs. I loved the colors in the bird bowl.

Usually, I would have bought some of these $2 apiece painted paper birds, but I’m on an extensive and so far successful campaign not to buy things on impulse; they lie around the house and end up getting thrown away. It’s a big step for me, and I like doing it.

It was usually anxiety that prompted me to buy things I didn’t need. I’m getting past that.

But I would have liked to get one or two of these birds to photograph. I won’t. It was a sweet end to our walk on Main Street; I’m glad to share it with people who read the blog.

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