Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

26 April

Preparing For Winter In Spring. David Came This Morning With 40 Great Bales Of First Cut And Two Bales Of Straw

by Jon Katz

There is hay in the barn. Yay, a great feeling. We have enough to get us through next May if needed.

It’s one of the fascinating rituals of living on a farm—I start planning for winter around the first of May. The first thing the farmers taught me was that if you wait until September or October, it’s too late. I get started now. I’ve sweated out a few Octobers; hay can be scarce and expensive.

I learned my lesson.

I’m the Bedlam Farm Quartermaster. Maria takes care of the animals daily, and I take care of maintenance, planning ahead, and shopping.

It takes us all summer to get ready. Dave, our excellent and conscientious hayer, has worked for years on the ingredients that go into hay. It’s the best and richest first-cut hay I’ve ever seen, green, extensive, and full of nourishing ingredients. The sheep look great; their coats are thick and bright, and so are the donkeys.

The pastures need lying and brush hogging, and the fences always need some mending. In winter, rats and mice come into the house looking for food. We need to ensure there are no holes they can use to get into the upstairs, as our friend the rat did.

We also need to install and then remove the storm windows first.

In summer, David plants, harvests, and experiments with different grains and plants. He came this morning – Maria is off hiking in the woods with a friend – and we had a good hour-long talk, as always. We keep promising to have lunch – his sister, it turns out, reads the blog: Hey there! – but this year, we’re going to do it.

We got two bales of straw this time for Zip. The farmers have a very effective way to keep Barn Cats warm: They stuff straw into one of those polyurethane coolers. It’s one of the best and most efficient ways to keep the cats warm if they need it.

Other ways for a barn cat to stay warm in the coldest weather: You can make a small, simple cooler using a lidded box, foil, and recycled packaging materials. Sometimes, the things that keep things cold are the same that can keep animals warm in the winter.

I like the farmers’ way; they’ve lived with Barn Cats for centuries: polyurethane coolers stuffed with heat-retaining straw. We also have a heated cat house if needed. Zip rarely used it this winter, but he loved being out in the snow.

Itt’s good to know it’s there.

David is a fascinating man.

He has never owned a computer and is horrified at the idea of having his own blog (he is a hermit, I think), but he wants to hear more about it. If anyone I know should have a blog and write about growing healthy and prosperous hay, it’s David. He is always fun and rewarding to talk to. He’s studied the makings of good hay all of his life. His hay is unique.

It’s a great feeling to have the winter’s hay in the barn in May, and next, we start working on firewood. I’ve messaged our lumber man telling him we want his wood again, and Maria will begin stacking the remaining wood – we have about a cord left – and preparing the shed for a series of two-cord deliveries, ending in October, just about the time we light up the wood stove.

It’s still cold here at night like it used to be in April and May, but the weather people say it could go up to the 80s on Monday.

Extreme heat gets to me more in the summer than extreme cold in the winter. It’s time to get the fans out and the air conditioners in soon. Preparing for winter is one of my most favored tasks on the farm. Getting the wood and hay in is lovely; I always think of the old farmers and their brutal struggle to prepare for winter.

Mine isn’t brutal, but I have a connection to that time. Maria will do all of the woodstacking, as usual. She has made it clear she doesn’t want or need any help. I’ve stopped bugging her about it.

26 April

Spring At Last, Really…Good Morning, Friday, April 26, 2024. The Miracle Of Life Is Enough

by Jon Katz
When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom’d,
And the great star early droop’d in the western sky in the night,
I mourn’d, and yet shall mourn with ever-returning spring.”
– Walt Whitman, on the death of Abraham Lincoln
I think of Whitman’s poem on the First Day Our Lilacs Start to Bloom every year.
That was this morning when I looked out to see the green lilac leaves framing the animals grazing. It was a beautiful and very uplifting way to begin the day.
When I woke up last night, I was thinking about miracles. It occurred to me that a miracle doesn’t have to be spectacular, like walking on water; it is often so mundane that we miss it. Lincoln was a miracle; I miss his courage, decency, and honesty. Sunrise is a daily miracle for me.
One of my spiritual guru authors wrote that the miracle is to walk on the earth and breathe in and out.
For me, the miracle is just being alive. I am still alive, and I am walking and photographing this beautiful world all around me.
My life is already a miracle because I exist. I sometimes feel that people want me to be more than I am. But my miracle is just what I am. That’s enough.
Now that I think of it, flowers are a miracle every time they bloom.
Fate at rest. I’ve noticed that when dogs sleep, it often looks like death. Perhaps this is why they are so accepting of death while humans hide from it and deny it. I hope I die as peacefully as Fate sleeps.
Zip might be a miracle sent by the spirits to enrich our lives and remind us of the power of animals to love and remind us of love. That is a miracle, for sure.
Friendship is a miracle; the tough dog Bud is always happy to let Zinnia, his pal, use him as a footrest.
25 April

I Seem To Have A New Work Companion: The Chronicles Of Zip (A/K/A Zud), A True Kind Of Parable And Feline Ham

by Jon Katz

My garden bed has yet to be ready for a few weeks. So I bring flowers into the yard in the late afternoon when the sun is low and beaming into the camera. It’s often too hot for Zinnia, so she sits in the shade on the porch and watches things.

I have a new companion, Zip. It took him two days of getting yelled at and pushed aside before he realized I didn’t want him coming between me and the flowers. I sat on a chair behind the garden bed, placing the flowers in sunlight.  I think Zip was lonely once – he lived alone and out in the forest for the first year of his life – and he is happy to find his people and a lot of animal friends and fields of mice and moles and chipmunks.

He has a spiritual quality about him, and he certainly knows how to connect with me.

Then, I use autofocus and manual focus for my shots. I love abstracts and moody ones. If such a thing exists, they will be my trademark flower photo. He’s also figured out how to pose for the camera. He is a feline ham.

 

Zip sits a couple of feet next to me and sits quietly, sometimes dozing.

If I move, he moves with me and finds another place to sit. I love having him along; occasionally, I lean over and scratch his neck. I love his quiet companionship. Taking flower photos has always been a solitary thing for me. Not anymore. I have a cat companion who watches me closely but never interferes. He has picked up my mood and my vibe. Brilliant, these barn cats.

25 April

Flower Art. Out In The Sun, A New Way Of Understanding Flowers. Just Ask My Leica.

by Jon Katz

I had a non-stop day of work: check-ups, blogging, flower photography, and pantry work.

I’m happy and blessed. This will be my last post of the day.

It was a beautiful day, outside and inside. See you in the morning; I hope you enjoy these flowers as much as I did. They do lift the soul.

Tomorrow, I’m heading back to the pantry for a special mission. I’ll be capturing some heartwarming moments of the older kids from the school, who are lending a hand in gathering backpacks. It’s a beautiful initiative, and I’m thrilled to share these photos with you. Rest assured, their parents and the school have all approved the photographs.

I’m going to the living room to wear earphones and listen to Taylor Swift’s new album. I’ve heard most of it and like it light. I love her writing and musical sense.

I look forward to seeing you in the morning.

I have a nice spot outside with the sun directly on my face. It’s my favorite lighting for flower photos.

I got some purple flowers yesterday from Sue at the Cambridge Florist shop. I needed something to balance the yellow and white daisies. Sue wouldn’t let me pay her because I gave her a book last week. My grandmother would have called her a bench, meaning a stand-up human.

The daisies almost stole the show. That’s the sun setting behind us.

 

25 April

Pantry Need Of The Day: Relief For Parents, Decaf Columbia Whole Bean Coffee (And Canned Chicken)

by Jon Katz

In the past couple of weeks, we’ve been concentrating on getting healthy food to the children of the Cambridge families who need food support. The program has been a great success; there was plenty of good for the children at today’s backpack stuffing.

(Above, students from the school pick up the backs at the pantry and discreetly and privately bring them to the school. The families come and get them.)

This week, Pantry Director Sara Harrington is asking for help in giving the parents some relief. She has chosen two items from the Amazon Pantry Wish List. Both are gone from the shelves:

Amazon Fresh  Decaf Columbia Whole Bean Coffee Medium Roast, 12 Ounce (Pack of 3), 19.99 dollars.

And for the family, something else the pantry has run out of:

Swanson White Premium Chunk Canned Chicken, Breast in Water, Fully Cooked Chicken, 4.5 Oz. Can, Pack of four: $7.93. It’s a great price for an easy and healthy family dinner.

 

This morning, volunteers packed more than 70 packbacks; your donations were a tremendous help. Everyone got what they were supposed to get and more. Thank you.

 

Getting the packs stuffed. Photo by Maria Wulf

Preparing the kitchen for people coming to eat a meal.

Yesterday’s boxes from the Army Of Good. Thank you.

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