Peace of the Pie

In June 2010, I quit my job so I could bike around Europe for the summer. I planned to return to San Francisco in September. 'Sure the economy's rough,' I figured, 'but I'll find something.'

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

A day in the life

Even when I’m writing for myself, I try to avoid ‘journal-y’ writing. First I did this, which was fun, then I saw so-and-so, who’s cool, etc. I don’t like writing that way and I find it makes for boring reading. Even if you substitute ‘killed a panther’ and ‘the Loch Ness monster’ for ‘did this’ and ‘so-and-so’ respectively, that still makes for a pretty banal sentence. That would be a pretty incredible day, but how did you kill the panther? Were you scared? How did you feel afterwards? I digress significantly, but hopefully the point is made. Since the readership of this blog makes it no different than writing for myself, I’ve tried to do the same here.

Sometimes friends ask me, ‘so, what do you do all day? It can’t be much, since you can’t even find one interesting thing to write about once a month.’ The second sentence is more implied than outright said, but I feel it. The truth is that I have a rough routine, but every day is a little different, which makes the question embarassingly difficult to answer. I wanted to try though, so on Saturday, June 9th, I tried to keep track of what exactly I do to pass the time. I definitely made sure to choose a day when I had things to do, so that I would appear more productive and so that I wouldn’t have to foist sentences like ‘between two and four, I pretty much stared out into space,’ on you, dear reader(s?).

I have re-caught the green thumb, as long as that term refers to the desire to garden, not the skill. The last time I had said appendege, I built the seedboxes you see here and tried to grow a variety of delicious vegetables. Without exception, all of them failed. What you see growing here is a Darwinian selection of local weeds and grasses. I think I’ve let them grow as long as I have to avoid the unflinching stare of failure. I didn’t realize that protecting the seeds from the pounding rain was as important as the protection from chickens and weeds the seedboxes provided. All the seeds drowned. But I will not be deterred by a little complete and holistic failure. I bought more seeds, better seeds, and decided to be scientific. Each one of the former peanut butter jars you see here is filled with a different mixtures of soils and fertilizers, and in each one I placed one tomato seed. Tomatoes are the coup de grace; they’re delicious, and they’re expensive and heavy if I buy them outside. But they’re a high maintenence vegetable. So this morning I woke up with the plan to build a protective plastic roof in my garden, under which I could plant tomatoes and red peppers, the coup de second-to-grace. I’d already planted green beans, which don’t need such coddling, to the left of the roof. So in the morning sun I planted seeds and moved the supports around to make sure that water would run off the roof and not puddle. Believe it or not, that took me all morning.

Saturday is a slow day in Cerro Iglesias. There’s no school, so the teachers are gone, as are the students coming and going from all directions. Saturday is also the day of worship for Adventists, which is the most popular religion around here. They go to church in the morning and have bible study in the afternoon, so the streets are mostly empty and the town mostly quiet. As I walked to the co-op, seen here, it was a mostly clear day, and it felt sort of idyllic. Perhaps this picture doesn’t really capture that peace, but I felt it.

My specific goal for that afternoon was to make a poster for a talk I’m giving on Monday about product diversification. The co-op is sort of the town hub, so there would be other things to occupy my mind and time, comings and goings, even on a Saturday. A man I’d run into the other day from a nearby community told me he wanted to talk about building an aquaduct and that he would meet me at the co-op that afternoon. He never showed, but other people came by and asked about the poster I was making, commented on the weather, complained about the road. By the time I had finished my poster, the weather had gotten ugly. Recently, the weather has been behaving itself for the most part. Mornings are usually sunny, and if the rain comes, it does so for only a few hours. But this afternoon the wind whipped, and the rain extended its visit well into the night. I went back home in the late afternoon to cook dinner but promised to return later that night to watch whatever sporting event happened to be on. When I got home the clouds had descended and swallowed my house whole. Out my front door, I could only see ten feet and the rain was still falling. I cooked some spagetti and tried to talk myself out of going back to the co-op. I would just get wet and cold, and I don’t really care about boxing. But I had told people that I would go back and I kinda like watching them get really into the fight or the match or the game. So I went back and found that everyone else had faced the same decision and decided to avoid the rain. I bought a pack of cookies and walked back home. After some tea to warm up and writing to wind down, it was time for bed.

I suppose you could call that a typical day – some kind of physical work in the morning, afternoon at the coop, cooking at night – but like I mentioned, every day is a little bit different. Sometimes not that much though.

1 Comments:

  • At 7:34 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    Happy belated Birthday Adam! I haven't spent much time on the blog lately...nothing about it is ever boring! I can't believe anyone would question that a day of yours is anything but intense...if you only pick a flower and read a book, you are living a life so few ever will - I am in awe of it...really!

    Check out ://dlsimpsonfamily.blogspot.com/ in a day or so for recent pictures of the renovations on Mom's/Grandma's house.

    Lisa, David, Jake and Jenna

     

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