Monday, April 30, 2012

Tooth and Tree

Can you see the crack running down vertically from the junction of the two main limbs stretching up? This is the same old huge maple tree that my son and artist Matt Bua secured the base of their "tree house bridge" to.

My husband noticed the crack a while back. This tree is behind our house, very close to our house. I have since noticed a similar old maple tree at our soccer field with a similar crack. I wonder if this is a common old age affliction of maple trees. The huge limbs press upward full of strength for years, and then the weight of all that vigor and strength begins to succumb to gravity...and slowly, the huge vertical limbs start to pull away from their core....they come "unglued" so to speak.

We need a "tree guy" now to come tell us what to do. Can we wrap the tree with a huge steel belt,  to prevent it from splitting apart? Would that work? OR would he suggest lopping off one of the huge limbs, maybe the one looming over the roof of the house?

Meanwhile, and not so differently, I must seek the attention of the dentist to ascertain exactly what is going on deep inside my tooth. Does it have a similar crack that is slowly widening and allowing great gusts of cold air to hit an exposed nerve? Ot is it simply decaying gums exposing the root of the tooth? Which would be bettter? Which costs more to fix? or shore up? Can something be loped off to make it stop hurting?

That's all for now from Aging Acres....

Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Drawings

the Crisis Farm drawings
See "Crisis Farm" post about 2 posts back. It was unseasonably warm and beautiful...no one moved all the collected detritus, so I could work several hours a day on these drawings. There is nothing so rejuvenating as slow rumination on the concept of crisis...I find myself pondering the big questions, like, Will any of this stuff get moved once my drawing is done and there is no reason for it to remain? and Where can all this stuff go? To what category of storage does a large plumbing apparatus belong? Will we be able to eradicate the collapsing barn? What would it feel like to look out my bedroom window and not see the old ramshackle monstrosity?

But drawing the whole time. Drawing and thinking.

A Less Orderly Life

garden fresh
One of the many benefits of a less orderly life is that in the Spring, when I crave the bitter strong taste of dandelion after a long winter of store-bought greens, we have plenty of huge beautiful specimens to dig up. I bring them inside, wash them, cut the leaves at the base so they are all free of the stem, and toss them into a frying pan in which olive, garlic, and salt are already sizzling....Soooo delicious. And as organic as the $5.99 bunches in the "Health Food Store".

See other posts for some of the drawbacks of a less orderly life. My 16 year old son just asked me the other day while making a cup of tea, wether I thought it was possible for a "Crisis Farm" to be neat and tidy. In other words, is it perhaps the nature of the beast to constantly be in flux with unfinished projects, collections of potentially useful materials, gardens in which weeds are OK (cause many are after all edible!) and so on. I told him about an old, but working, farm I had just driven by yesterday where the verdant pastures were littered with rusting machinery and bits of ancient vehicles, but where also perfectly operational tractors and trucks were parked in front of the big barn.....Perhaps each vehicle as it died functioned for awhile as a parts supplier....And it almost looked to me yesterday like a natural sculpture park...but I know I have a special vision when it comes to junk.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Practically Embracing Technology

That's his head on the bottom of the screen
My son is in college in Florida. He and his fellow animation students are given more homework than is humanly possible to accomplish in the allotted time. Incredibly, he made it this far, past the middle of March without paying the inevitable price for countless sleepless nights augmented by no time to eat either. Then, this past weekend, he spent the entire weekend unable to work due to a fever, headache, and just plain malaise.

 He and I have been "skyping" alot. It is a great way to show each other drawings that we are working on, and I will admit to helping arrange furniture in one of his illustrations, etc. You can even view each other's desktops! But this weekend, we reached a new height of intimacy. He suddenly disappeared from the screen and when I asked him what he was doing, he replied "Folding laundry." Then he explained, still off camera, that he thought he had better make the bed in case he suddenly needed to sleep again. Sure enough, he lay down on it in front of me and I could just see the top of his familiar head. After awhile, I continued working, and realized that he had fallen asleep on camera. I called his name softly, and he woke up long enough to agree that he needed to take a nap. So we agreed that I would leave the camera on so as to be able to wake him in a while,  and went out and worked in my garden. When I came back an hour later, there was my boy, just the top of his head, still sleeping. So after awhile, I woke him up so he could eat some dinner, which he didn't feel like doing. It was as though he was home again...in his usual corner only this time actually really  "on the computer" more literally than he ever was in the flesh...

Monday, March 19, 2012

Crisis Farm


Looking south at the house, west to the mountains and bathtub, northwest to the collapsed barn
No one can say I'm not inspired by my surroundings. I have just had the blissful epiphany at the age of 51 that everything I've done and not done up until now is what my life is about, and so it is time to make drawings about this. My husband and I have felt very unsure about the big move we made out of Manhattan 10 years ago and up to this old farmhouse on 12 acres in the Catskills. There is so much to say about what has been difficult that I won't begin. But I think that the photos above give you some idea of our engagement with this place. I am using the word "engagement" very consciously, as it is used to describe battles and war missions; but also as it refers to engagement to be married forever, as in, hopefully in love.

And it wasn't until my son went off far away from here, to Animation school and met a friend there who was apparently (and much to my son's surprise) envious of my son's upbringing on a "crisis farm" as they coined it. That appellation has really pleased me. It explains the whole thing. Not only were we reacting from the crisis of experiencing 911 in NYC, but we were anticipating every crisis that is and may be coming...fuel shortage (note the plastic vegetable oil containers all over the place left over from fueling the diesel jetta for over 100,000 miles and the heaps of fire wood for heating the house on wood), the food crisis (organic gardening, bee-keeping, maple-sugaring, raising chickens, all a must), the crisis in education epitomized by the awesome structure that sculptor and friend Matt Bua is helping my homeschooled son to erect in the yard to satisfy the "Shop" mandate for 7th grade.

So, our place screams of our engagement. You can see bee boxes stacked up against the wall of the house on the left; you can see gardening tools and the wheelbarrow, not neatly put away, because you can also see at the right, our huge collapsing barn. You can see 2 greenhouses way in the background, one small useful one for the 70 or so chickens, and the other a "crisis farm" mistake...a detour into intensive aquaponic gardening that didn't pan out,.

looking north to the veggie oil car and my studio...
So, this early Spring weather has me outside every morning working on 3 drawings that document my view this Spring of life on the "crisis farm". If I can, I may even extend it on to a fourth drawing continuing the 180 degree view...There is no end to the view here....

I just realized reading back on what I wrote that I have solved a 10 year problem of what to call this farm...we sometimes have to come up with a name for farm market venues if we want to sell honey, eggs, or raspberries, and now we have it: Crisis Farm. Forget Raspberry Ridge and Joy Farms.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Did You Ever Bake a Cake by Accident?

Nana's cake in foreground, ganache cake behind

So it was getting late, and I had baked a "Nana's Cake" which is a simple yellow cake. One of the kids wrote the recipe on a big gray piece of cardboard many years ago, and we have that version hanging on the wall in the kitchen just for cake emergencies. My daughter's team had won their indoor soccer game and it seemed cause for a mild celebration; thus the cake.

I called to my daughter to get out the "Joy of Cooking" and look up an icing recipe that didn't require unsweetened chocolate as we were all out. She began searching through listings in the index and reading aloud mis-pronunciations of "Marzipan" and "genoise" (or somesuch) and then she got to "ganache" which, mispronounced sounded like a kind of icing. I absent-mindedly encouraged her to look at that recipe. She did and when I got to it a few minutes later, I just started assembling the ingredients carefully paying attention to not mixing the sugar in with the tiny bit of flour. I did remark to myself, "Hm, that's odd that this icing recipe calls for a half cup of flour." But I soldiered on through the rest of the directions,  wondering about the 5 eggs also, but reassuring myself that they get warmed, so that must make sense as an icing recipe. It wasn't actually till I got to "spread evenly in the baking pans" that I suddenly realized that  I w as not making frosting for the original cake; rather, I was baking a second cake. A much fancier cake than the first. We melted some chocolate chips, added vanilla extract and called it a day on the first cake.

Yet another day (and into the night) of "doing it the hard way! But then we did have two cakes to choose from.....There are moments when the "hard way" pans out.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Maple Fire Anonymous

So it is often lonely doing things the hard way. (I think that Sarah Palin calls this "being a maverick") While most Americans are shopping on Saturday, or having their nails done, or visiting art galleries, I'm still out here dragging firewood from up and down the road, and yes, off the collapsing barn. (see last post)

So it was wonderful to realize that last night, what had been billed as an art opening, turned out to be a secret gathering of "Maple Fire Anonymous" people. I was not the only one there smelling faintly of smoke, with dry chapped hands, and smudges of soot behind my ears. I was not the only one there out early on cold mornings to skim the ice of the buckets, and to empty full ones. I was not the only one there who had been too busy with sap for the last month to spend much time "in the studio" as they say.

How important to have acquaintances and friends who say helpful things like, "well, I just use old scraps of sheet metal to block the wind", and "It's supposed to go down below freezing again tonight."

These friends are wise about more than just making maple syrup too...one of them stated with certainty that wearing glasses at our age just weakens the eyes, and as we stepped up close to look at paintings in the show, he did not produce glasses. He said the key is to look at small things under very bright light. So today, in addition to continuing the maple fire, I did not wear my glasses all day until evening when I kept trying to see what page to find"crepes" in the "Joy of Cooking" index. It looked like pg 690 at first so I tried that but got "About fruit pastries", then I tried 590, but got "About flavoured oils". After one more failed attempt, I admitted defeat and borrowed my husband's glasses. Oh, no wonder; I had been reading "crisps" as "crepes".

Still, I plan to take the taps out tomorrow as it is certainly time to clean the house and work on some other projects....