A Beautiful Day In the Neighborhood …

 A Beautiful Day In the Neighborhood ... It was a gorgeous weekend here — blue skies, yellow leaves falling off trees, sunshine, snow on the peaks. It was so gorgeous that even though we’d done a nice hike early in the day, I couldn’t stay home yesterday afternoon so I took Raymond for a little bike ride.

It’s our newest trick — I get on the Happy Bike with Ray on the leash and off we go. He runs alongside with that rocking-horse run that really happy dogs get. The trick though, is that I need to keep reminding him to “be careful” and to “watch out” because he has a tendency to drift out in the way of the front wheel, and that could be disasterous for all of us.

Sometimes I sing to him to keep him paying attention. So there we were, cruising down Clarke Street (I live between Lewis and Clarke — by the Yellowstone river — clever, eh?) and I was making up words to the tune of Mr. Roger’s theme song — singing to “Mist-er Ray-mond, Mist-er Raymond” when I look up and there are two very bemused people working in their garden. They waved, I waved, and off we went, singing about what a beautiful day it was in our neigborhood — yes, I felt like the biggest dork on earth, but somewhere I’m sure, Mr. Rogers himself was very pleased.

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Friday Linky Goodness …

Because it’s Friday, and because we ate and drank just a tiny bit too much last night at Patrick’s Posthumous Birthday party (which was delightful and jolly and because our friend Jim hung Patrick’s picture on the restaurant wall, it sort of felt like he was among us) — this morning LivingSmall brings you that staple of the exhausted blogger: a list of links.

Hugh Fearnly-Wittingstall expounds on the joys of hunting mushrooms (and I wish I lived in England so I could have gotten the free mushroom guide with my copy of the Guardian). If it ever manages to rain before the first snow, we might have some fall mushrooms here. Spring is more reliable in our climate but I’m still hoping for some fall boletes or chanterelles.

I can’t remember how I found this great article about Angelo Pellegrini, but it’s worth a read: Man of the Earth Reaps the Good Life
If anyone had doubts about how a garden can reap change, go read this terrific piece in Orion about a community that built a garden as a response to a drive-by shooting: A Community Garden is More than a Garden

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Happy Bike

 Happy Bike Once the heat wave passed it seems like everyone in town has been riding around on those retro-cruiser bikes. I was on the verge of going to buy one when I remembered that duh! I have a bike!

I bought this bike a couple of years ago for forty bucks at the pawn shop around the block, and so instead of buying a new bike, I took it to our local bike shop and got it tuned up. New tires, brake pads, shifter cables (which came undone yesterday so back it goes on today) and the crowning glory, the cargo baskets on the back.

My bike is so much fun that I’ve been inventing errands just so I can go ride it someplace. I can bring two full bags of groceries home from the store in those baskets. I can run my errands, get some exercise, and get all happy at the same time with the joy of cruising around town on a bike, just like I was a kid again.

The funny thing is that it was baskets exactly like these that made me the laughing stock of the fifth and sixth grade. The only one who had a dorkier bike than mine was Valerie, whose parents hadn’t noticed that her little-kid bike didn’t fit her anymore. We all rode our bikes to school when I was a kid — it was probably two miles each way from our house, a straight shot down Western Avenue. We only had a school bus from Thanksgiving to Easter, when it was too snowy to ride bikes. It took about half an hour to ride to school and when we first moved back into town, I didn’t have a bike (because Patrick had left mine on the ground in front of the garage door and Mom backed over it one day). I rode her old bike for a while, and then my grandmother bought me a new bike. It was yellow, pretty much like the one I’m riding now except that it only had one speed (like a little-kid bike, very uncool when everyone else was riding three- or ten-speeds) and coaster brakes. And those baskets. We all carried these big leather cases for our books and while I wanted a rack, that I could strap my case to with a bungie cord like the cool kids, what I got was the big cargo baskets.

Of course, my grandmother liked the cargo baskets for the same reason I love mine now. They are very practical. And I find it quite entertaining that the same baskets that caused me endless moritification at 11, fill me with great joy at my advanced age as I zip around town doing all my errands, getting exercise, not burning fossil fuels, and feeling myself fill with sheer, kid-like joy.

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What do I do with the plastic?

I had a small fit earlier this week and decided, after mulling it for a long time, that I have to get rid of all my plastic food containers. Even though they’re #5 plastic, which from what I can find on the internets, aren’t leaking bisphenols into my food — but how do we really know? They said those hard, clear, polycarbonates were better than the softer plastics, and now look what they’re finding out. So I had one of those moments on Monday where I decided they were all bad,  I cleaned out the drawer where they lived, and scoured my cupboards for all the small ceramic and glass containers that I already have — and then I went on eBay and ordered a bunch of old pyrex refrigerator dishes with glass lids. They weren’t exactly cheap (especially when you take shipping into account — they’re both heavy and breakable), but they’ve already lasted 30 or 40 years out there in the universe, they’re nice looking, and they’re made from materials that we know to be absolutely inert.

But the question is, what do I do with the shopping bag full of old plastic containers (there are some new ones in there too, still in their wrappers). It seems a waste to throw them out, but if I really do think they’re toxic, is it right to take them to our community thrift shop?

What do you all think? Let me know in the comments …

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Eggs and the People who Produce Them …

standard sexlink golden.thumbnail Eggs and the People who Produce Them ...

The San Francisco Chronicle had an article a couple of weeks ago about pastured chickens, followed closely by this article in the NY Times questioning whether “cage free” as it’s practiced in chicken houses around the country is really any more humane than battery chicken.

I’ve been buying eggs for a couple of years from a local outfit called Willow Bend Eggs. They are the most astonishing eggs I’ve ever eaten. They’ve ruined me for all other eggs. They’re brown, and large, and the yolks are the deepest marigold color you’ve ever seen and they stand up all perky and beautiful. And they’re expensive — at least two-fiftly more a dozen than commercial eggs, and at least a dollar or dollar-and-a-half more than other local ranch eggs. But they’re worth it.

A few weeks ago, a small basket with a single-page flyer in it showed up at our local grocery store next to the eggs. It was about this time too that the egg cartons started stating that these eggs cost “9 food miles.” (The egg cartons that are so low-tech that all they say is “Willow Bend Eggs” in magic marker.) The flyer said that Willow Bend produce was registered organic in 1988, and that they grow potatoes, garlic, salad greens, locker lambs, and that have a small herd of Jersey cows.

I was intrigued, so when I saw these recent stories on eggs, I looked up the name on the bottom of the flyer and called. I didn’t hear back and I had nearly given up on talking to the person who raised my great eggs, when the phone rang on Sunday afternoon and it was Isabelle, calling back. She apologized for sounding out of breath, she was making honey.

We talked for nearly an hour. Isabelle’s primary concern is that we’re ruining the earth at an unsustainable clip. She was a little off balance because she’d gone shopping for clothes in Bozeman the day before with her twelve-year old son, who wanted a pair of new sneakers for school. This is a person who has been living off the grid for a long time, and the clamour of shopping had her nearly undone (to say nothing of the extravagent price of a pair of new sneakers). This is someone who is really living small, unlike me — she told me she did put in running water when she was about to have her last child, who is now five, so the midwife wouldn’t have to haul it … but that she’s still not convinced that it was a good idea.

I asked her what’s been going on lately — there isn’t an egg of hers to be found in town. She said that’s because she’s in between flocks (and because it’s been so hot). She’s got one flock that’s about layed out, and the new pullets aren’t big enough yet to be really laying. It’s one of the things that makes her eggs so good — she doesn’t overwork her chickens. She’s having a really hard time right now because with the ethanol boom, the price of chicken feed has gone through the roof — and because she’s in between flocks, she even had to buy a dozen commercial eggs the other day. “How’d that go for you?” I asked her, after telling her about the egg in California that nearly made me cry it was so bad. “Well,” she said. “I’d been feeling really bad about having to raise my prices, but I feel a little better about it now.”

The other thing she said that people don’t take into account when they’re looking at the price of her eggs is that the price of land has gone so high, that it’s getting more and more difficult for farmers and ranchers to stay on their land. Especially organic producers … it’s one thing to be organic, but harder when someone builds a McMansion next door to you, and starts spraying herbicides and pesticides that can’t help but drift across on the breeze.

All I know is that I’m happy to pay a fair price for a dozen eggs raised by chickens that are truly free — chickens that are let out every morning to go mess around in the creek, or head into the barn to scavenge for grain dropped by the cows, or to sit in the middle of the yard and take dust baths. (I’d get you a picture, but Willow Bend farm is up that road where my brother died in the wreck, and I just can’t go up there). I’m also happy to pay a fair price to keep a farmer on that land instead of a ranchette, or a McMansion, or some rich person from someplace else who is going to fence the whole thing off and not allow hunting out of some sentimental sense that they’re “protecting” the “wilderness”. I liked Isabelle. I like knowing that I buy my eggs from a real person, and that I’m helping her support her kids and her chickens and her cows and her pigs. In fact, I might buy half a pig from her next year, especially if, as we discussed this afternoon, she’ll take all those apples that fall off my trees and feed them to the pigs.

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