Green Acres Permaculture Village

Growing community from the ground up.

Mid-July, 2023: Work Parties, Community Dinner, Arborist-in-Training!

 

TUESDAY

Tuesday work party: Three of us begin to clear this alley/driveway. And that includes this gigantic, deep rooted burdock which Nathan, who walks over here to work with us for most work parties, managed to actually dig up completely. Note: the root is about as long as the plant was tall. 

THURSDAY

Community Dinner evening, something we have managed to cut in half. Rather than every single Thursday, we now meet first and third Thursdays of each month. That way, when we do meet, it feels like a celebration rather than an obligation. 

This evening, a special “treat.” Cooked pokeweed leaves, which our friend Ben, with his old friend and new Green Acres resident Ningyao’s help, knows how to cook. First, a one-minute boil in lots of water. Then, a ten-minute slow boil in another pan with not so much water. He tells us that when cooked this way, the poke leaves get rid of two different kinds of poisons. We did eat them, trusting Ben’s expertise, and no one got sick! Tasted like, yep! – cooked greens. Something we may want to remember if store bought greens get too costly or scarce; or the carefully cultivated greens in our garden don’t do well. Let us appreciate, indeed, let us revere, all these wild plants that simply, know how to grow, no matter what the conditions.

A big turnout this time. Probably 18 altogether. Unfortunately, it had just rained, and looked like more might be on the way, so we met inside, instead of on the patio. 

Afterwards, some young people in the living room . . .

decided to make music together, and then, Yingyao told me in the morning, when I went to bed, decided to go out to the yurt, where they continued for two more hours — in a thunderstorm! An evening to remember, especially for them, and for the yurt, which has just been inaugurated into yet another new use! That adds to its already discovered uses: a place to sleep overnight, a place to do yoga chikung taichi, a place to hold meetings. And, it appears that, whatever the occasion, both the yurt’s size (12 feet diameter) and the indoor/outdoor rug inside that features a mandala, create its capacity as a centering device. Something sorely needed in this increasingly chaotic age.

FRIDAY

At our dinner, I had taken a few minutes to consult with neighbor Devin, who works as an arborist at IU, re: two of the trees in the Overhill front yard. So, I shouldn’t have been surprised to see Devin pull up the next day with his grandson Ethan, and lots of tools for lopping and cutting. He proceeded to give an hour-long lesson to 11-year-old  Ethan, who jumped right in and learned quickly. Great to see older generations passing along hard-earned expertise. Great to see  younger generations eager to learn.

SATURDAY

Work Party. Ningyao and I finished clearing that area we began last Tuesday. YES! 

Nathan and Joseph weeded the main garden. (And Joseph pulled lots more potatoes out of the ground. Will reseed that area with some kind of fast growing green. Arugula?)

At one point there were three bumblebees on different echinacea flowers here, plus a monarch butterfly. But by the time I rushed to get the ipad to record the scene, they were gone. There is a tiny bee on one of them, however.

  

Impermanence!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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