Archive for plants
Where are the farmers?
Posted by: | CommentsThe following is my first post on another of my sites: Star Nebulea. That site will be for longer pieces and oddments that don’t fit in here. It is also in a bit of happy chaos for the moment as I sort out a design with the new Headway theme.
I was probably nine or ten when my uncle talked my grandfather into bulldozing out the hedgerow along his field. Coming home from school, the devastation and mounds of brush and trees was a shock. Never mind that the next year would see a neat field right to the road. Where would all the bunnies and birds live now? That child of long ago felt that something wasn’t very close to ideal in that situation. Grownups and their thinking seemed very alien.
Are there any farmers left in our world? Very few, it seems. To the modern-day agriculturist, profit appears to be the overriding motive for their work. Their thoughts seem to follow government and business advice and principles…. neither of which know farming, except from a monetary perspective. What does it take to be a true farmer?
- Understanding Our earth has been at this business of growing plants and animals a lot longer than we have lived on her surface. Thus it knows how to feed and nurture her offspring…. all of them. Thus it holds an immense wealth of knowledge for every situation. This knowledge is freely offered. The farmers of old had an excellent grasp of this understanding, even if it was “just” intuitive. Mankind has but to observe, and apply the principles the earth demonstrates.
- Observing When our son was a child I would read him stories, many of which he knew by heart. When I tried to “reinvent” portions of the story, he would become upset, “Read it right, Dad!” Thus we become familiar with what we are told, and don’t want to hear or learn a new way. So to learn what the earth has to teach, we might have to let go of some of our old familiar concepts; allow new observations to become acceptable. Watch an animal that has been caged or penned when let loose into a natural environment. Discovering what it then eats most of can tell you what it has been most lacking in its diet. Watching which insects live on healthy plants can lead to an understanding of the symbiosis that is so necessary for healthy balance. This observation can take a lifetime, yet coupled with one’s natural intuition can bring immediate results in how and why we farm.
- Sharing We seem to feel that mankind has been set apart from, and perhaps above nature. Nothing is further from the truth. Living on the earth, our entire physical being is from the earth, and depends on the earth to remain functioning in a healthy manner. No matter how far apart we may try to distance ourselves from earth, or nature, we are one species among so very many. All of them depend on each other. We have temporarily lost the awareness of that complexity, of that wonderful interdependence…. yet it is of no less importance. Sharing involves give and take in any relationship, and so it is here. True farming is all about sharing…. giving back to the source at least as much as we receive.
- Feeling The concept that the earth, plants, animals, or even minerals have no feelings is one of those human concepts that served to distance us from our own feelings. In true [spiritual] reality everything that exists, is, because it is created by and held in existence by love. All that is is simply different manifestations of love. How powerful does that make love? And can not love be considered the most grand of feelings? A true farmer, if he/she doesn’t begin farming with love, will soon develop it to an ever-increasing level.
- Communication All of nature communicates. Plants and animals are aware of one’s love for them, and they reciprocate. Music is another form of love that they thrive on…. that has been known for decades now, by the scientific community. As a child it was natural for me to sing when I worked alone in the fields, or on those rare occasions I worked with someone who would teach me new songs. A loving touch to a leaf or tree trunk or animal can do wonders, literally miracles.
- Practice It is common knowledge that learning anything improves with practice. New practices can feel alien until we become used to them. This includes learning with nature. Yet from a different perspective, all that is, is already known. To us, perhaps, it might be unconscious knowledge, yet it is there, and can be intuitively drawn upon, thus much shortening the learning cycle.
Awe
Posted by: | CommentsI collected the last of the tomatoes today, and probably the last of the raspberries and alpine strawberries. We had a light frost last nite, and the pumpkin plants finally gave up the ghost. Arrow discovered he likes the little tomatoes, but like the berries, he wants them hand fed. Guess he is not into self picking.
The trees are awesome, and I often spend time simply drawing in the sometimes glowing colors. I find it a good energy technique for replenishment. Awe is involved here… I try spending more than a few moments at this. I’ve gotten to doing this more often, not only with aspects of nature, but also with people. Building on and exploring awe seems to lead to some wonderful and sometimes subtle insights that don’t always seem to fit into words. Guess it is a personal thing….
Tree Energy
Posted by: | CommentsIt seems odd to me that anyone can touch a tree and not feel the energy coursing thru it. To me, it is as simple as turning my attention to it. At this time, I’m not aware of much beyond that, say as for what particular benefits this tree brings to man.
For me, the same is true of running water, the mountains, or weather. It is as if I perceive their energy in a general way, tho each is specific. Each, when my attention is on it, fills me with a sense of awe, love, and a completeness, or connectedness. It feels as tho the connectedness is of multiple eons… a tie more longstanding than human family connections. Yet what I sense, or feel, is but the tiniest bit of this relationship.
Perhaps it is time to shed some more preconceptions of what nature is…. of what I am.
Choice of Interaction
Posted by: | CommentsThe following thoughts surfaced as Arrow and I hiked along a country canal this morning, in glorious 85 degree sunshine, and stood on a small dam listening to the water cascade.
The things we make and interact with—money, vehicles, furniture—are not alive in the sense that plants, animals and humans are alive. We give so much time to these “inanimate” objects while lessening or even loosing our connections to living things.
Children that play outside with nature, interacting with the grass, plants, and animals are learning about life with living things: the living universe. Can these lessons be learned by kids who play mainly inside with plastic toys? Watching nature shows on tv is still a far cry from having hands on experience. It seems to me all the best lessons of life come from come from the give and take of life itself.
Ancient man held an intimate relationship with not only plants and animals, but also with the more subtle energies such as the weather, the earth, and the energies from the universe itself. He recognized the active interconnectedness of all life. In our growing preoccupation with organized religion, politics, and industrialization, we left our ancient heritage to embrace inanimate things.
Yet inside our hearts we remember. Perhaps we are ready to reclaim these ancient connections, and honor ourselves as well as the universe that has cradled us for so long.