KC and I cleared today. Onions on one end, lots of weeds on the other. Exciting stuff!
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Plantings 03222015
New enemy: Ground Ivy
It’s everywhere.
But it has the greatest nickname: Creeping Charlie.
I’m going to try and pull and put into pots. It’ll grow in shade, right?
Seed starting chart from PSU
Lettuce Starts
SSE — Mizuma
SSE — Reine Des Glaces
SSE — Green Oak Leaf
Burpee x2 Winter Marvel (75 — first week of June?)
Burpee x2 Giant Caesar (70 — first week of June?)
Burpee Rougette de Montpelier (45 — first week of May?)
First flowers into mini-greenhouse
Packets from grandma:
The Butchart Gardens
Two Rows: African Daisy
Two Rows: Calendula
Two Rows: Cosmos (Sensation Mix)
Two Rows: Nasturium
I’ve never planted or intentionally grown flowers. We’ll see how it goes…
“Birds will take advantage of a tailwind, and when the wind is blowing the other way, they’ll hole up. They won’t exhaust their strength going against that wind for long when they’d make only a few miles a day or get blown backward. They rest, because if they rest that day and restore their strength, the next day they can more than make up what they lost by not going…They change their course year after year on the basis of the particular situation. They never come back exactly the same way twice because the conditions are never the same, but they always get to their destination. They have a purpose, a goal. They know where they are going, but they zigzag and they change tactics according to the situation.”
Myles Horton, The Long Haul: An Autobiography (New York: Teachers College Press, 1999),80.
Quoted in
Sapon-Shevin, Mara, and Nancy Schniedewind, Educational Courage: Resisting the Ambush of Public Education. (Boston: Beacon Press, 2012).
Full citation of article later…
First starts of the year
Collards (Ferry-Morse): Old package, don’t have high hopes
Swiss Chard (Burpee)
White Chard (Burpee)
Fordhook Chard (Seeds of Change)
Red Russian Kale (SSE)
On third floor now in bright sun!
Peter Korn quote
What makes this life good, ultimately, is that I spend my days thinking a tiny bit of the world into being, primarily by building a school into a sustainable institution, empowering other people through teaching, and challenging my own preconceptions through writing and furniture making. It is unremitting, demanding, repititive work. That goes without saying. The material of the world does not bend easily. Yet it is work that exercises creative muscle, work through which I construct my identity and map the world in a way that fulfills me and finds confirmation in others. Quite frankly, when I am at the school, I am in a place where I matter.
Korn, Peter. Why We Make Things and Why It Matters: The Education of a Craftsman. David R. Godine, Publisher, 2013.
(urgh…kindle version — find page number later.)
Ransom
It feels weighty, real, this book. It’s a re-imagining of a portion of The Iliad as Malouf takes two sets of six lines and imagines a short novel. Couldn’t put it down.
This description of leadership struck me as particularly compelling:
“Holding in his head all the roads that lead out to the distant parts of his kingdom, he feels them at times as ribbons tied at the centre of him, for the most part loose but sometimes taut and pulling a little, according to what is happening out there — events that his body is aware of as dim foreboding long before the last relay of messengers, who for days have been running down dusty roads, burst in to deliver it as news.”
pp.43-44
Malouf, David. Ransom: A Novel. (New York: Vintage, 2011.)













