Thursday, October 29, 2015

"Nature" is entirely too natural

Our experiment in growing arugula and kale this fall is going about as expected. I water, fertilize, and find them the proper amount of sun, and in turn they neither thrive nor keel over (which is, I suppose, somewhat a success). They do not respond to gentle, soothing talk, singing, or threats. Pests unknown are getting more benefit from them than I am.


It was for this latter reason that a neighbor came to investigate and diagnose the problem. Although she has a vast store of knowledge herself, she brought along an impressive tome of a plant encyclopedia, required for a class she is taking. She commenced the investigation with a series of questions.


"Where did you get the plants?" she said. "Quality can make a big difference."


I admitted that I had started them all from seed.


She seemed impressed at this. "So you started them indoors..."


"Uh, no, I figured the main reason you do that is to give them a head start in the cold spring, but since it's fall..." It had made sense at the time, but a lot of things seem to make sense until you realize they are very, very wrong.


The questions continued about sun, fertiIizing, whether I had observed any critters on them, etc. I hadn't, but clearly there were critters on them because there were big holes in some in the leaves.


"And you looked on the underside of the leaves?"


I had not. If Ii turned the leaves over, and there was a critter there, I would be at great risk of touching it. And above all, my gardening motto is: Have as little contact with nature as possible.


But she, brave soul, is not afraid of contact with nature, and declared that we would not only inspect the underside of the leaves but do so with her jeweler's loupe, which would allow us to see any potential critters roughly at 2000000000% magnification. Thus an aphid would appear the size of a small battleship.


We did so, and although it took the better part of the afternoon for me just to figure out how to use the jeweler's loupe--it defies logic, as far as I am concerned--I finally located a fat, brownish insect.


And as I was inspecting it and we speculated on what it might be, I witnessed a marvelous display of nature. Or maybe the bug was getting tired of being examined and wanted to put on a show.


"It's pooping," I said.


"What? You can see that?"


"Well, a big, clear bubble escaped its rear end. Its assumed rear end,"  I amended. "The one opposite its eyeballs."


She said it certainly "sounded like excrement" to her.


Suddenly I wasn't so gung-ho on consuming this arugula I was working so hard to raise. Or anything else growing in nature, if this was what happened. Probably a lot more of it happened when I wasn't looking.


That was also the Hero's reaction when I related the pooping incident. " I could've gone all day without knowing that," he said. But then his mathematical curiosity kicked in, and he asked for particulars on the pooping. Was it clear, or white? How big was it? How big was the bug? What was the ratio of poop to total bug size?


"Maybe it's beneficial for us," he said finally, trying to put a positive spin on things.


With the amount of scrubbing I now felt I would be compelled to do with anything grown, I couldn't imagine that anything beneficial might remain afterward.

Maybe I should just leave nature to nature. After all, the bugs seem to know what to do with it.

_______
The Princess and the Hero will soon be getting on a plane and flying a long, long ways, hopefully arriving on the Big Island of Hawaii. That is the plan. There could be a different plan, however, if the Princess has to sit next to someone on the long plane ride who is not the Hero, and she must be forcibly removed from the plane for squeezing the someone's circulation off during turbulent parts of the flight (defined by the Princess as "if I feel like I'm in a plane, it's turbulence"). Stay tuned.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Portable pots

My foresight at planting our kale and arugula in large but lightweight containers (in former lives they were known as grocery bags and plastic tote bags) has proven magnificent. It has ensured that I spend my days fretting over exactly where on our property the plants will get the most sun and generally be the happiest, and then move them there.

And move them, and move them.

When I discovered that there was more sun in the back of the house, I hauled the five containers through the house, down the stairs, and out the back door. Later, there seemed to be a smidgen more sunlight in the front, so I carried them into the house, up the stairs, and out the front door. Sometimes when I went to water them, I would forget where they were. I brought the plants inside when a freeze threatened.

But still I fretted that they weren't getting enough sun. I realized they would get even MORE if I moved them back and forth every day—morning in the front, afternoon in the back.

But I kept picturing someone calling men in white coats to come and take me away somewhere to "rest," so I refrained.

I have done this moving of the plants enough times that I am considering stopping my weekly workouts out at the Y for, perhaps, several years. Of course, I am always considering stopping my workouts at the Y. But the Plant Workout, consisting of plenty of bending, stretching, stair climbing, even weight-bearing, might actually justify a boycott.

But then winter would come, and what would I do? Perhaps the cold season could usher in the Fake Plant Workout, in which I would shuffle pots of plastic plants from upstairs to downstairs, or even outside.

I'll definitely have to consider it, just as soon as I locate my living plants and water them.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

We're on it! Or not

The Hero and I, in an uncharacteristic burst of planning ahead, have made our respective packing lists for our upcoming trip to Hawaii, even though it is still more than two weeks away. The Hero actually wanted to pack several weeks ago, once we made our reservations, but that unhealthy fervor soon passed.

Because the first leg of our journey will deposit us up on a mountain somewhere on the Big Island, my list of items to take more resembles a cruise to Alaska than a visit to the Aloha State:

Sweatshirt. Rain poncho. Warm socks. Carafe for coffee or soup. Hand warmers. Parka (rated to -20 degrees F). Extra blankets. Ski hat. Maybe another sweatshirt?

Whereas the Hero's sole provision for cooler weather is: enclosed shoes. Even this concession was made under protest. "I really don't think I'll need them," he said.

His list of items runs like this:

Swimsuit, check.
Sunscreen, check.
Sun hat, check.
Ukulele, check.

The ukulele is intended to enhance our sunset experience on the trip, and any other occasions where music might be wished for. (For example, during our mountain stay, I am thinking animal control.)

The Hero is vexed by one item not on the list: a hammock. He would gladly carry it onboard—if necessary, leaving most of his other possessions behind—if he could come up with a viable way of using it on our trip. "Look at those trees," he'll muse when viewing photos of a Maui nature trail online. "We could string up a hammock between those."

And it wouldn't be long before we might be strung up for doing so.

So now. all we have to do is wait for the Packing Fairy to emerge from somewhere, and with a wave of her magic wand put everything on the lists into our suitcases.

Right? There is a Packing Fairy, right? Please say there is a Packing Fairy. And that she knows exactly what we will need and what we can leave home.

Wait, Packing Fairy! Why are you taking the books out of the suitcase? I need those. Yes, all 15 of them! And put those hot chocolate packets back. It's gonna be chilly at night. Hey, maybe you should go work on the Hero's stuff. I'll take care of my own.

Thanks anyway.



Monday, October 5, 2015

The Hero and Princess learn about Hawaii

In anticipation of our trip to Hawaii later this month, we borrowed a documentary on that state from the library, and sat down to eagerly glean important information for our visit.

For reasons known only to themselves, the producers thought it a good idea to start the video with a piece about Hawaii's aquaculture industry. We listened to several earnest workers discuss their important work, and somewhere in a fascinating discussion of shrimp broodstock, we promptly fell asleep.

This reaction in no way should be taken to mean that we do not believe in the important work of the aquaculture industry to bring tasty, sustainably raised fish to our tables. But—and perhaps we are not very responsible tourists—it is not quite what we have in mind as we are planning what to do in Hawaii.

We awoke some time later to an explanation and illustration of the various forms of hula dancing, which, combined with our excellent nap, immediately rekindled our interest in the documentary.

As we watched, something seemed vaguely out of place. True, the video was a little dated, although we couldn't quite figure out how we knew this. Was it the clothing? the decor? tourists' eyeglasses?* And then we realized:

No one had a cell phone camera.

Oh, there were plenty of cameras. In fact the camera was invented for Hawaii. And in this documentary, everyone was wearing one, because that's what you do with an actual camera: you wear it. It's too big to fit in your pocket, or your purse, or anywhere else. When someone in the nearly bygone camera-toting era anticipated going on vacation and mentioned having to "get in shape" beforehand, they were probably referring to strengthening their neck muscles to accommodate several pounds of deadweight camera.

But Hawaii is, of course, more than fish and cameras and even luaus (though the Hero has declared his full intentions of attending a luau where they are serving roasted pig). There is also a lot of water hanging around, and sometimes it comes crashing over the sides of cliffs, resulting in impassable roads, which in Hawaii are sometimes more of a suggestion anyway. On maps there are more than a few places where the roads just end, and one assumes that there is a mountain or some other impenetrable object at that spot to prevent further motorist travel, such as a T-shirt hut.

We have not yet made it through the entire video, although we have every intention of doing so. It’s a good thing this wasn’t in ancient times, and we weren’t listening to the stories once told by storytellers. The stories were considered sacred, and once one started, nobody was allowed to move. I think they would not have been pleased by our nodding and napping.

Rather dull video aside, there is one inescapable fact about Hawaii that has already endeared the islands to us: it is the only state that grows coffee.

And that, my friends, makes up for all our involuntary instruction in fish farming.


*Total number of tourists wearing glasses in the video: 76.

Total number of Hawaiians wearing glasses in the video: 0.