(SLOW) DOWN TIME
It’s been a
summer of nonstop activity. I know it
wasn’t last week that I was still waiting for the snow to melt but the time has
gone by in such a blur that it seems like it.
Summer is always
busy but in the five years since I retired I have managed to get myself on the
local tourism board: this kind of multiplies the busy factor of the
season. I really don’t mind. I enjoy being part of a positive influence in
my community, and the people I share board duties with are all great to work
with. It’s just that from the long
weekend in May until Labour Day there is a lot to do.
This year
was extra crazy. Our group always plans
and hosts the Canada Day celebrations but we really upped the ante this summer
striving to draw a bigger crowd with live music and a steak supper. Mother Nature treated us to a rain/hail storm
to make things even more challenging but the day was a success in spite of her
efforts.
Our other
big event was our first ever garden tour in mid July. In order to get something new like this up
and running we needed an assortment of local gardens to show off. It was much more challenging to get people to
commit than I had anticipated so I ended up including mine as one of the rural
yards. My selling point when asking others
to show their gardens was “You keep your yard and garden anyway. It will be no extra work.” While I believed this to be true when I said
it, turns out only the first part is.
When you know you have people coming expressly to see your yard and
garden, you are much more critical of grass height and visible weeds. I can’t thank the folks enough who did offer
their gardens for the 2018 tour, and I hope we can find some more for next
year. It really was a lovely day.
Besides
those two events – and all the work that went into keeping ahead of grass and
weeds – I also spent a few weeks in the spring clearing out deadfall in the
shelterbelt which we later wood chipped piles of mulch for our fruit
trees. As well, we hosted several
different visitors, entertained grandchildren a couple times, and as the days
got hotter and hotter, took up hauling water to keep everything alive.
In July the
garden kept me busy with peas and beans to pick and process, now it’s cucumbers
I can’t keep up with and soon it will be corn.
Then there will be potatoes to dig and I literally have a forest of tomatoes
I will have to deal with. But right now,
strangely, I have nothing to do.
I have
wandered around the yard. The grass
crunches to powder under my shoes; it is so dry. I took a pail of water to a few new trees,
but watering on a larger scale is out of the question. We just can’t take our well for granted. We haven’t had measurable rain in ages and
there is no guarantee there will be lots of snow for runoff to replenish our
water supply in the spring. As
depressing as the scorched earth is out there, I really like to take showers
and wash dishes on a regular basis.
So with the
one thing that needs done out there off limits I found myself wandering aimlessly
this morning; all my accumulated work ethic spinning its wheels in the sand. Time to turn my mind to other things … I will
be ending August off with a short camping trip with a smattering of family and
grandchildren … I should pack. And later
on, as I wait for my farmer to come home for supper, I will pour myself a glass
of wine, sit on the deck, and watch the hummingbirds do battle over sugar
water. We can celebrate the end of
summer together in the twilight.