Farming Sustainably in the Age of Peak Oil

At Clear Sky Meditation Center's farm, we are starting small. Most of us are city folk with lofty ideals and little farm experience. We've read books about permaculture, biodynamics and organic farming. We have been on inspiring courses. But how do we put this into practice? How do we integrate this work into our Dharma Practice?

When it comes to actually doing it, the challenges are daunting. Farmers in Canada are struggling. Land prices are soaring. Peak Oil is near. How do we make a living AND do it well AND wake up? This is our challenge. Please join us on this journey of exploration and discovery :)

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Ladies and Gentlemen, its Farm Time!

A day goes FAST on this farm. Its probably the case on all farms, boy are these folks hard working! However, when I review what I actually did in 7 hours of physical activity, it seems scarily little! every thing is s..l o..w...e...r. I feel like I've upgraded my world view software! This time its 3D, big, and heavy! I'm a girl used to typing at brain speed and endless thinking. This change to using my body to DO STUFF in the heavy chunky relative world of large objects just seems ...slower. Slower than my usual ideas that never get done! I feel like I'm actually doing SOMETHING for the first time in my life. I feel like I've been living in my head and daydreams until now. This is solid stuff baby.

Time ticks as I lift the next heavy basket of beets or carrots or duck legs to their new positions in cars, fridges, cutting tables or shelves. Time ticks as we roll up 300metres of heavy duty irrigation piping for the winter. Tick Tock says the clock as breakfasts, lunches and dinners comes round, fuel in for energy out. It takes a couple of hours to dig up four baskets of beets or turnips.

I had breakfast with the family and the 9 birds, 3 dogs and 3 cats all in the kitchen. I had the privlege of being chosen by one parrot as a shoulder roost and feeder of sunflower seeds from my own muesli. After that, in my day of work, I did two things, neither completed, but both well attempted. I started at the picnic table, aka lowtech vege sorter. I cut the heads of the rainbow beets I'd pulled yesterday. They are so called 'heritage varieties' with all sorts of interesting colours. It makes them a mint more money, branding this family farm the superstars of the Edmonton local vege fiefdom. So I chopped beets relentlessly and left a giant mound of leaf carcasses in my wake. The dark red beet stems look particularly murderous. Along with the carnage I proudly birthed fresh baskets of clean cut mohawk beet-nicks, all looking particularly naked. They are destined for storage bins in a slightly too warm barn room (the next refrigeration project will cost $9000)...and sniff sniff...they may rot before we can sort and sell them. I'm learning there is a lot more behind farming than first appearances. $$$$ is required to do it well!

I was really windy and I'd suited up in my Salvation Army winter overalls. Bbbrrr... I was guiltily and gleefully listening to my ipodcasts about fungi mycellium saving the world when I think I hear sounds... Its around 11 and I looked up...I heard human man sounds wafting over. Whats Mr Farmer up to I wondered... I drop my scissors and am pulled like the hypnotised victim in a horror movie, to the giant...humongous...wood shavings mound!

Wood shavings used in the duck barns had been delivered in a huge truck the day before. Our very own yellow sahara sand pyramid out in the middle of Alberta. Its all fine and dandy when its calm out...but oh boy..the wind came today. So anyway I got to the woodpile and found farmer Hercules fighting a huge battle. He's trying to keep the tarp on the blowing pile. He's hurling 50kg turkey cages to hold the sheet down. He's a big guy, but his technique for super human strength is to yell like those American gladiator wrestler hunks on TV. Pretty incredible. And today he was yelling like a bear A LOT. So in this wind I run to the pile and throw my body onto the corner he gives me! It was a violent snow storm of wood dust that stuck to my eyeballs and gagged in my throat. In all the activity all I could think about was whether I would suffocate in it, or fall off the mound cos I couldn't see. I imagined my eyes full clogged with the ghastly stuff. But we kept fighting. The tarp kept coming off. We kept fighting. He even got the tractor to dump the turkey trays on as high as he could. I mean, come on, it was just WOOD DUST, but it felt like gold going down the toilet. Or a fire in the village! My body said EMERGENCY! Fight! Exhilaration! Joy too! Exhaustion too! Eventually the wind won and we threw in the towel. We let the wind make love to whatever it damn well wanted to, today it had the hots for wood shavings and plastic tarpaulins. The $1000 shavings blew and swirled gleefully away. Maybe half will be gone tomorrow. Now if we had $10,000 we could build a shed JUST FOR woodshavings.

Tonight my eyes are red, theres a few pieces of chopped up trees still hiding beneath my lids, ouch, grumble grumble. I think the forests got their revenge! My karma for using paper!

Written during a 2 month winter apprenticeship at a farm near Edmonton AB


5 comments:

chatso joanna said...

Wonderful to hear and feel with you, thanks for your sharing.

Caitlin said...

Cool post!!! Thanks Cara! Keep writing, please.

Connor Walsh said...

Super-vivid description mo chara! Now do you still ahve audio gear with you? Cos… haha, you know what I'm going to say! Keep it up Cara :)

Zeporah said...

Cara, mighty woodshavings nymph, human perch & feeder of big birds, adventurous groomer of scary rainbow beets, you are an inspiration for us city gals.
Looking forward, mucho, to the next installment!
Zep

Unknown said...

Heya you vessel of goodness!
Really fun to read about your adventures out there. I guess your hard work will keep you warm in the cold weather! Keep it up!