Tom Kepler's Blog
February 27, 2025
Completing the First Winter Garden Project
"Planning Next Year's Garden During a January Winter Storm," where I laid out a series of winter garden projects for myself. Let's see how I'm doing on that list.
This spot in the garden has been my first planting, three days ago. I planted French Breakfast radishes, spinach, arugula, kale, a lettuce blend, claytonia (miner's lettuce), mache, Creme de Brulee shallots, and tatsoi. Below I've included three photos, before and after shots of the cold frame situated on the south side of the garage, and then the planted area.



I've added a new cedar 2x4 to the bottom of the cold frame, replacing the old, rotted wood, and have added new plastic to the lid. I also have sealed the wood (after around eighteen years!) with a food-grade safe sealer. I tried the "square-foot gardening" planting strategy this year, including three new cold-weather crops: mache, tatsoi, and clatonia. It's never for sure how the plants will do, especially with new crops, but we'll see! A last cold snap is coming in three days, so I plan to cover the cold frame with a blanket that night.
This project is now complete, and I hope I will be eating salad greens from this small plot by the end of March if not sooner. And now on to two other projects, planting indoors using a grow light and building some covered hoop frames for the main garden.

January 6, 2025
Planning Next Year's Garden During a January Winter Storm

I use writing as a means of organizing my thoughts; that is to say, some of my writing is in order to process my thoughts and discover what I know, rather than sharing what I already understand. Today is such a post. Last January, I was in the middle of teaching full-time, having come out of retirement at the request of my former school district to teach for one year, 4th Grade. Therefore, in the spring of 2024 I was pretty busy and pretty tired. I did manage to get some early vegetables planted, but I didn't engage in any early-season planting, utilizing season extending techniques such as row covers.
Here I am now, though, in the first week of January 2025. It's dawn and apt to snow today. I'm sitting by my woodstove, processing all the garden seed and materials research I've engaged in over the last couple of days. For our garden, my wife and I have always had to balance gardening utility with garden aesthetics because our garden space is not hidden behind a fence in a backyard. There aren't backyards with high fences where we live, due to the plan of our development and home owners' association covenants. Therefore, I've always striven to make our vegetable garden not only productive but also eye-pleasing. It hasn't been too difficult, and over the growing seasons, we've had many strollers pass by our garden and ooh and aah at our veggies.
I do tend to approach my kitchen garden more with the "micro-farm" philosophy than with the "seeds-to-weeds" philosophy, though. I enjoy the planning and maintaining just as much as the harvest. I also believe that a garden that includes cold frames, row covers, and that utilizes three-dimensional gardening (up and not just along) can still be beautiful. Researching and also considering aesthetics are key to maximizing garden beauty because then the garden displays both the beauty of the vegetables and the creativity and knowledge of the gardener.
Therefore, now that I've reminded myself of several big ideas, it's time to look at specifics.





Well, I think I've gathered and organized my thoughts regarding my overall gardening plan this year. As always, weather will play its part! Part of my motivation for gardening is not just being to eat fresh organic food. I'm also encouraged by the knowledge that getting out in the garden is good for health. It provides what Dan Buettner, Blue Zones founder, describes as a wide range of easy and natural motion, not to mention getting out in nature and getting our hands in the soil. Well, enough philosophizing! I think I'll spend some more time putting together my order for seeds. I'm looking forward to walking out into the garden, picking some vegetables, and then cooking them ten minutes later. Now that's fresh!

December 20, 2024
Bike Riding on Ice: Winter on my Wahoo Smart Bike

Concerned about the lack of opportunity to exercise during the winter, I had originally considered buying a membership at the local gym. There I could walk the indoor track, lift weights, and exercise on a variety of machines. However, I still would have to dress and go outdoors to get to the gym. My wife and I decided to invest in a treadmill . . . and then the salesman at the shop said, "There's something else I'd like to show you, since I know you like to bike." And, of course, ka-ching, I am now the proud owner of a smart bike, a "smart bike" being a bicycle than can be linked to a cycling app that simulates elevation changes (necessitating shifting) and different environments, such as beach, mountain, or city rides.


I hope to end the winter in much better shape than usual by being able to bicycle regularly without having to worry about falling on slippery roads and breaking a bone. I've also made myself a promise that if in the afternoon I want to watch a little TV, I'll watch it while walking on the treadmill. When good weather arrives in the spring, I plan at this time to cancel my Zwift membership and just ride my real bike on real roads and trails here in SE Iowa. We'll see, though. I might still want to get some concentrated exercise on the indoor smart bike. Right now, though, all I have to do is ride, no matter what the weather. Not such a bad thing, hmmm?

November 7, 2024
I Ask Google's Gemini AI to Write 250 Words About the Benefits of Tiny Camper Trailers
Image from InvestopediaArtificial Intelligence is the talk of the town nowadays, so when Google's Gemini AI app icon appears on my Chromebook, I decided to try it out. I asked Gemini the following question: "In about 250 words, write about the benefits of recreational camping with a tiny trailer." The response is below.
Tiny travel trailers, also known as teardrop trailers, are becoming increasingly popular among campers for several reasons. Here's why they might be a better choice than larger travel trailers:
Maneuverability: Tiny trailers are much easier to maneuver and park, especially in tight campgrounds or urban areas. This makes them ideal for those who want to explore off-the-beaten-path destinations.
Fuel Efficiency: Towing a smaller trailer significantly reduces fuel consumption, saving you money on gas and increasing your travel range.
Lower Cost: Tiny trailers are generally more affordable to purchase and maintain than larger RVs. This makes them a great option for budget-conscious campers.
Minimalist Lifestyle: Tiny trailers promote a minimalist lifestyle, encouraging you to pack lightly and focus on the essentials. This can lead to a more peaceful and stress-free camping experience.
Easier Setup: Setting up a tiny trailer is quick and easy, often requiring minimal effort. This means more time enjoying the outdoors and less time fussing with camp setup.
Unique Camping Experience: Tiny trailers offer a unique and adventurous camping experience. They allow you to explore remote areas and immerse yourself in nature without sacrificing comfort.While larger travel trailers offer more amenities and space, tiny trailers provide a more flexible, affordable, and eco-friendly camping option. If you're looking for a hassle-free and enjoyable camping experience, a tiny travel trailer might be the perfect choice for you.
The article also provided highlighted content that included additional quoted information from five other websites, providing links to the original websites. All in all, the short article was an impressive, concise compilation of information. The article was organized well, its grammar and punctuation were according to standards, and based on my six years of tiny trailer research, the information was accurate.
So the question is--what's lacking? I've thought about this a bit, off and on for a few days until I could get time to write this article. I think that what was lacking was human experience. The article was written in an objective, technical writing style, and there's nothing wrong with that. However, the lack of a human being behind the writing was evident to me. I didn't feel any life experience behind the information.
The interesting thing is that Gemini said that if I wasn't satisfied with the result to include further instructions or even examples of the writing style I was looking for. I didn't take the time to do that, and in future experiments, I will take more interaction time to see what results I achieve.

As a tiny trailer camping blogger, I can say that the AI article included material that I've included in articles I've written--essential information on the basic question of why to camp in a tiny trailer. If I had allotted myself the time to interact with Gemini to attempt a more personal writing style, could I have achieved that? That's something that I hope to report back on sometime.
As a career writing teacher, I found this AI exercise interesting. This computing capability is not going to go away. I believe as a research and writing aid, AI writing composition is here to stay. As writing teachers, I think the task will be to teach writing as a learning tool. That old writing truism that we write not to just share what we know but also to discover what we know is applicable to AI writing. Having AI write for us is not a process that will lead us to moments of self-revelation; it will not clarify our thinking or lead us through stages of understanding on a subject like writing can do. Writing as self-expression, whether it be creative or informative, will always be highly personal. This will be an angle for teaching writing--what's inside that craves to be shared?
Some writing in the future might be an amalgam of AI and individual writing. For instance, could I take the AI writing above, have Gemini tweak it some, and then take those efforts and include my own thinking and experience? Could I consider the AI writing just part of the drafting process? I suppose I could. Time might be an interesting factor to consider--how much time to provide the AI with specifics as opposed to just knocking it out myself. And if we're writing about something that we are emotionally invested in, that first impulse of creativity, whether fiction or non-fiction, is a key element in any creation. Turning it over to AI could lessen the sense of creative achievement.
I wonder if a sculptor drew some rough sketches, provided some written instructions and images from art history as examples, and then told the AI robot, "You knock out eighty percent of the statue, and then I'll finish the rest." Would the sense of achievement be the same? Would the sense of artistic ownership be the same? Is towing my little trailer with my pick-up the same adventure as pulling a Conestoga wagon or bike-packing or backpacking? They would all certainly be different experiences, same road, different experiences.
I'm not going to try to solve this big ideas, but I do think that considering consciousness is important. If we consider the three-in-on experience of knowing or perception--the knower; the process of knowing; and the object of knowing (the known), then the existence of AI certainly impacts the process of knowing or perception, if not the knower or the known. With 3-D printers, we can already copy objects or produce objects from specific instructions. However a totally revolutionary idea or creative artifact?
The creative process, be it whatever blend of intellect and emotion, is an organic process, one often begun without any clear goal, achievement, or artifact in mind. I'm not sure how our AI machines will fit into the very human process of learning and creating. I do know, though, after mulling over and writing about my reaction to this experiment with AI writing, that one thing has become clear to me: human intelligence and artificial intelligence are two separate beasts that are connected. As William Wordsworth so famously said in his poem "My Heart Leaps Up": "The Child is the father of the Man." Howsoever artificial intelligence is not a child whose heart will leap with a natural appreciation or reverence for nature's beauty, it is nonetheless at this time a machine that can perfectly write 250 accurately bland words about tiny trailer camping.

October 14, 2024
The Fairfield Loop Trail Is Fully Open--3 Rides

The Loop Trail is sixteen miles long, encircling Fairfield, Iowa, mostly composed of lime chip and gravel but including some cement pathways as it passes through town. On Thursday, my ride was eighteen miles, the extra two miles of riding consisting of a couple of errands, a bank deposit and some grocery shopping that I included on the ride. Friday's ride was twenty-one miles that included some road riding north of town and on the Libertyville Road. On Saturday, my twenty-three mile ride consisted of a twelve and a half mile ride on pavement northwest of town out to Libertyville, missing the industrial cement paths of the trail, and catching the Cedar View Trail at the 223rd Street trailhead off the Libertyville Road and then continuing back north of town on the Loop Trail.


Even though the Aventon e-bike can zip right along at higher assist levels, I'm careful on the trail to not go too fast--for several reasons. One is that I don't want to crash and hurt myself. "Road rash" burns, and I have no desire to pick gravel out of my skinned knees and elbows, even though I carry a small first-aid kit. Loose gravel, cracks in the trail from the summer drought, animals skittering in front of you, and unexpected and perhaps leaf-covered tree roots on the trail can provide dangers for the bike rider, whether the bicycle is electrified or not.




September 18, 2024
E-bike Review: Aventon Level 2

Prior to buying the Level 2, I was considering buying a Gazelle 2024 Ultimate C380 HMB, a $5,000 bicycle manufactured in the Netherlands. I even test-rode the Ultimate, and it was a beautiful ride. I kept researching, though, and when I found out there was an Aventon dealership about three blocks from the Gazelle dealership, I decided to try out the Level. What I discovered was that the Level was an e-bike that handled well, had excellent online reviews, and was a third the price of the Gazelle. The Level also provided as a part of the $1,800 package a second battery, including free shipping. My final costs provided me a very ride-worthy e-bike and an excellent bicycle carrier strong enough for two e-bikes at half the cost of the Gazelle. However, it wasn't just the price that was my e-bike choice determiner. The Level 2 comes with a throttle (which I use rarely but is great to have when I need it), and it also can be programmed through the phone app so it will generate power up to twenty-eight miles per hour rather than twenty.
How the Level 2 Rides
The Level 2 is my first e-bike, and one concern I considered when buying was weight. At a little over fifty pounds, the Level is much lighter than the Aventon Adventure, and about the same weight as the Gazelle Ultimate. I found the extra weight of the bike does make handling different. I can't just throw the e-bike around like I can a conventional bicycle. This is my first bike with front shocks, and I must say that the shocks cause less strain to my arms. This is especially true for me because I have two pins in my left elbow, which causes the elbow to tire more quickly. I most recently have changed out the saddle to a Terry Cite Gel and have also added a seat shock absorber; with the seat cut-out and the shock, the ride is much smoother.
About seventy-five percent of my riding is on lime-chip trails. When the Level's tires eventually wear out, I will replace them with a more gravel-worthy tread, probably replacing the Kendas with Schwalbe treads. I find the current tires not as secure on gravel as I'd like. I've also found the kickstand sticks out a bit more than I like, and I have to adjust my foot position occasionally so my shoe doesn't tick the stand.

The eight-speed shifting is adequate for the e-boost levels. I rarely move below gear 4; however, when I turn off electric support and just pedal by my own power, I'm in the bottom four gears and have to stand on the pedals for any hill beyond a mild incline. The bike can be ridden without the electric support, but it's a slog. It's pretty easy to bottom out those eight gears when riding downhill, but I don't have much desire to ride more than thirty miles per hour. Using the higher electric-assist levels, I can keep a good pace when on pavement, which is great when I'm just jumping on the bike for a trip to the store.
The battery holds up well. I ride most of the time in the lowest power assist level. (There are five.) At 150 pounds, I'm not real heavy, and I believe I could easily hit fifty miles on a battery charge and not drain the 500w battery. The farthest I've traveled in a single ride so far is a little over thirty miles, and I had a little less than half the battery charge remaining. If I were to take the second battery with me, I believe my rear end would give up long before the batteries would!

All in all, I'm pleased with my purchase of the Aventon Level 2. The bike doesn't come with a Gates belt drive like the Gazelle Ultimate, nor does it have the infinite gear range of the Gazelle transmission. However, for the price, I'm putting many miles on a bike that has other options that I'm glad to have, namely, the throttle and the second battery. The bike doesn't weigh too much and comes with all the extras a commuter bicycle needs: rack, fenders, and lights. I added a mirror, which I think is essential, and also a nice brass bell, which provides a happy sound so I can alert trail walkers who aren't paying attention. I might one day still buy myself a Gazelle, but for now I'm perfectly content with my Aventon. #mc_embed_signup{background:#fff; clear:left; font:14px Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; } /* Add your own Mailchimp form style overrides in your site stylesheet or in this style block. We recommend moving this block and the preceding CSS link to the HEAD of your HTML file. */ Follow by Email* indicates required Email Address * First Name Last Name (function($) {window.fnames = new Array(); window.ftypes = new Array();fnames[0]='EMAIL';ftypes[0]='email';fnames[1]='FNAME';ftypes[1]='text';fnames[2]='LNAME';ftypes[2]='text';fnames[3]='ADDRESS';ftypes[3]='address';fnames[4]='PHONE';ftypes[4]='phone';}(jQuery));var $mcj = jQuery.noConflict(true);
June 24, 2024
How Will My Second Retirement Be Different?

How will my second retirement be different? How will it unfold differently from my first retirement?
I like these questions and began writing my response to them--providing some self-reflection; however, after a few paragraphs of writing, I decided the reflection was honest but the writing was boring. Welp, scrap the writing and try again!
After ten years of retirement, I have just finished teaching 4th Grade full-time for Van Buren County School District at the elementary school in Douds, Iowa, a very small town (population 112 in 2022). My original goal to save a little money for emergencies by substitute teaching morphed into a year of full-time teaching because of a one-year teacher shortage for the elementary school. Long story short--I saved much more money and also helped out the district where I had taught for twenty-one years.
Will I teach again? I taught a wonderful group of students and enjoyed myself, even though teaching is hard work and there were times I was tired. On the whole, though, my back-to-full-time teaching was a fulfilling "encore" experience. Will I do it again? Probably not. I will probably substitute teach some, perhaps averaging 4-6 days per month. Rather than working five days a week and getting the weekend off, how about working 1-2 days per week and getting 5-6 off? That seems manageable to me.
What is my activity schedule like now? As in my earlier retirement, I'm enjoying the greater freedom of saying, "I'll get that job done today . . . or maybe tomorrow." That "or maybe tomorrow" takes a lot of pressure off the old body and mind. Last school year I did catch COVID but was "lucky" to be sick during winter vacation, so even though my "vacation" was coping with the illness, at least I had the opportunity to rest all I needed. During the school year winter months, though, I did catch a respiratory infection which lasted for a month--having no fever but having a long-term cough and lassitude. That was tough, having to get up early and work all day when I was low on energy. Luckily, after a month I recuperated and got my energy back. I will really enjoy the ability to choose whether I work or not, since I will have no contractual work obligations. I can roll over and go back to sleep if I want to.

Can I go outside and play? One thing my students and I had fun doing last year (or at least I did!) was studying the difference between "can" and "may" (possibility and permission). Therefore, I can say it is now possible to spend more time outside--and, no, I don't have to ask for permission! I've been outside quite a bit this last month since school has been out, mostly bicycle riding and gardening. I bought an e-bicycle three weeks ago and have already ridden 180 miles. I really appreciate how an e-bike extends my riding range. This year my garden is a bit diminished due to lack of time in the spring, but it is doing well. I've centralized my main vegetable plot to just one spot on the north of our property, so managing the garden is easier.

My gardening has been more businesslike this year; mostly I'm putting crops in so that I can eat the freshest food possible. Yes, I've enjoyed getting out in the garden, but the early planting was while I was still teaching so the work was of the in-and-out sort. Get it done on the weekend and before it rained Since the weather has turned hot, I've been gardening in the early morning (sometimes after an even earlier bike ride). This spring has had more rain, so that has eased some of the work.
Will I go camping this season? You might ask that question, especially seeing our Airstream Basecamp in the background of the above photo. The truth is, I'm enjoying just staying home and spending quality time with my wife and family. Also, we've been loaning out our camper to Sandy's son to allow him the experience of camping, something he's done very little of. I'll be writing some articles this season about his experiences--his camping learning curve, so to speak. Sandy and I may camp; we've even chatted about buying another travel trailer! A lot is up in the air right now, and that's okay. I've got some home maintenance to complete. Right now, I'm re-organizing the garage and am enjoying that handyman pursuit. It's always an adventure when my English teacher self tries being handy!
There's a saying about living a fulfilling life--do what you like and like what you do. That's my goal this second time around. I'm more knowledgeable, too, about the process. Sandy and I have been watching the Netflix series about Blue Zones and healthy retirement. I plan to eat well, manage my stress, avoid isolation and engage in meaningful activity, and to be active. Right now, I'm catching up on my medical check-ups, which is taking up time; however, my transition to retirement is going well. I plan to rest, play, read, write, and to continue trying to live an integrated life. Let me end with "Live long and prosper," for I plan to follow the Star Trek credo and to boldly retire where I have once gone before. It doesn't have to be a new space to be a happy space.

February 11, 2023
Wi-Fi Trail Cameras: a Window into My Rural Land





January 18, 2023
I Am a Lotto Loser

While driving home from our rural land and listening to NPR on the radio, I heard that there was a new lotto in town with a pay-out of 1.4 billion dollars. Well, I hadn't tried my luck for a few years, so I decided that it was time to once again splurge and dream the impossible dream. After all, the radio told me that the odds were only somewhere over one trillion to one!
Arriving home, I mentioned that I was feeling lotto-lucky to my wife, and she said that she'd been talking to her daughter about buying some tickets also. We decided that Hy-Vee was an auspicious location to pull God's finger, so I bellied up to the counter and said, "We want to win the 1.4 billion lotto ticket! How do we do this?" I know that sounds like I had no clue, but I lowered my voice when saying it so that I'd sound like Orson Wells or Morgan Freeman. We bought ten Mega Millions tickets for a total of twenty dollars. "Now, I don't buy these things to lose," I told the cashier, "so these had better be lucky!" She just chuckled to herself, amused by my comment--at least, I think it was a happy chuckle and not an evil cackle. . . .
For the next thirty-six hours my wife and I engaged in scintillating conversation, planning how we'd spend our seven hundred million in cash after taxes. We'd live off the fat o' the land. We'd give money to our children so that we'd never have to worry again about their cars needing tires or about leaky water heaters or the dog that chewed a hole in the sofa. Trust funds for the grandkids were a given; a charity to help single mothers was a heartwarming idea, and a gift to the local university would be a great way to share the love.
We had asked when we purchased our ten "Megaplier" numbers what was the procedure for verifying our win. The online dot com was the answer. Therefore, the morning after the ten o'clock PM drawing, I fired up my computer, typed in the ialottery.com URL, and checked for my winnings. Of course, the title of this article does spoil the climax for any lotto optimists out there. We hadn't won. Sad emoji :(.
I wonder, though, if perhaps even though I hadn't won big . . . perhaps I had lost big! I mean, if winning big is a rarity, then isn't it possible to lose big, too? What prompts me to say this is my experience playing solitaire on my phone app. Sometimes I lose in such a spectacular fashion that I ask myself, "What are the chances of that happening?" It goes like this: The solitaire app loads up my game. The face-up cards have no moves. I flip through the stack, and not a single move is available, not a one. I have lost the game without being able to move a single card. Now, that has to be unusual, at least it is from my experience! I didn't just lose the game; I epically lost the game!
The lotto ticket looks like a receipt from a cash register, about three inches wide, printed black on white paper with a side strip in red declaring "IOWA LOTTERY." We bought ten number sequences, labeled A-J, five numbers and then the Mega Ball number. I'm not sure if numbers range from 00 to 99 or from 01-99. I checked the winning number posted online with our ten series of numbers and discovered . . . of the sixty numbers (10 sequences) not a single winning number was on our stub. To win, I would have had to have six winning numbers sequenced in the winning order. I didn't have a single winning number on the stub, much less in the proper sequence! It's like I go catfishing with a friend and use axle grease for bait. No bites.
Have I learned my lesson? Of course not! Am I going to buy another ticket soon? Of course not! And if you're interested, I searched my articles and found this title from 2013: "I Take a Gamble . . . and Lose." What I've discovered about myself is this: I rarely lose when I gamble . . . because I rarely gamble. However, sometime in the distant future when I try my lotto luck again, I really would like to win. Will it happen? Well, I'm not going to bet the farm on it, that's for sure!

January 2, 2023
A New Year on the Land

I walked our land today with my wife Sandy. We cleared a spot near our front gates for a trail camera, removing brush and mowing so that winds wouldn't whip the growth and trip the camera. Then we strolled a loop through our thirty-five acres, down to the bottomland and creek, then back up the ridge to our majestic white oaks and a trek skirting the fenceline back to the camping area. Because of the thaw, we stepped carefully to avoid stripping topsoil and moss from the steepest parts of the trail, the unseasonable melt creating mud rather than frozen soil. Not quite six months have passed since we have purchased this land, and in the tail end of 2022, we have accomplished one objective and begun what will be a continuing maintenance procedure of our land.
One clear accomplishment has been that our "infrastructure" has been upgraded: gravel for the road to the camping area, electricity, water, and sewage storage. For the new year we will be able to camp on our land and not have to leave with our 16-foot Airstream Basecamp once a week for water or to drain the camper's blackwater tank; we will be able to use our water spigot and drain our camper's blackwater (sewage and graywater) into our sewage storage tank, which will be pumped out once a year. In addition to upgrading infrastructure, we've also bought basic equipment to accomplish quite a bit of the basic upkeep for the land--a shed, mower, and UTV, along with some power tools. Next year we hope to build a small shower/toilet building that will be connected to the sewer holding tank and electric and water lines. The shower house will allow us to more easily have guests and also, hopefully, keep ourselves from being bitten too much by chiggers. We'll have our own private campground, or to put it another way, we'll be able to use our small travel trailer as a "cabin" as we stay on the land.
The "continuing maintenance" that we've begun has to do with our stewardship of the land. On-going procedures for regenerating or "re-wilding" the land include removing invasive multiflora rose, clearing the creek of downed trees to minimize erosion, maintaining fences (to keep the neighbor's cattle out), and thinning and nurturing tree and native plant growth. These procedures have begun in large part by hiring professional help for removal and planting grasses. We also plan to research, including hopefully advice from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, to determine what native plants to introduce and how we can include plants that provide food for wildlife. Right now, our land is mostly a bedding area for wildlife without a lot of plants available that provide food. Once we introduce more food plants, we should see a greater variety of wildlife. So far in 2022, we cleared much of our bottomland of brush and multiflora and also cleared some of our higher land, one ridge line also cleared. This next spring we'll have these areas planted to encourage grasses rather than multiflora and poison ivy.
We hope to eventually create a haven not just for ourselves but also for the local wildlife. We're not adverse to planting some domesticated crop areas, "food plot," for the wildlife. We've been told that turnip greens are good for deer and winter wheat for wild turkeys. We have this frozen winter season to research options. We'd like to emphasize planting native plants as much as possible, such as native fruit and nut trees. We already have hickory and walnut on the land, and we know of some native peach and pear options that might be possible to establish with some care and protection. Wildflowers are a consideration, but we've been told that they are difficult to establish.

After six months of interacting with this bit of our planet, our most significant acquaintances have been the huge white oaks on the land, five of which are between 175 and 250 years old. They are teaching me to experience time on a larger scale--an afternoon, a day, a season? Measuring by eras is even a narrow perspective. Perhaps just an awareness of the eternal now is the real lesson that these living giants can teach us, that it's possible to allow the flux of the world to swirl around us if we root ourselves in the moment. I've noticed that when I'm on our land, silence seems more three dimensional, deeper. Silence within me expands, extending beyond my body; and I feel the silence outside enfolding me, including me within the stillness between earth and sky.
Our thirty-five acres remind me that once there were no boundaries, no fences, no land titles. Boundaries are imposed by our minds, not by geography. A shore, a creek bed, a ridge, a valley--these are not beginnings and endings but are just part of the wholeness, a landscape of, as poet Gary Snyder wrote, "mountains and rivers without end." Winds swirl around our Mother Oak and around me; rooted in the earth, we abide. Joy this year and forever to the wind, the seasons, rain and snow, sun and shadow. I abide and lift my arms to the sky.
For all articles about our land, follow this link: Landowner.
