Progress!
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Log Cabin
I haven't offered an update on the building process in a while, so here are some photos to update anyone who may be interested...
First off, over the last few years, many of us toted several tons of ancient logs from an old log cabin from one place to another (a few times!) and perhaps we were beginning to wonder if it was all for naught... But No! as you can see, the old log cabin, which once was, is once again.
Reuse, recycle, repeat.
Practice resurrection!
Monday, September 17, 2012
Apple Cider Festival Poster
This is mainly for our local friends, family and church family, but I thought I'd share the poster for the event on this page.
We've actually had an unofficial Apple Cider Festival for three years or so, now, and this year is probably not any more official than last, but there's a poster now, and that makes it official...
Monday, July 2, 2012
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Green, Green Clover
There is something tangible
tactile
enticing
entrancing
about fresh tall spring clover
that makes me want to lie down
and spread my fingers
through their stems
and swim like a fool
in their great green depths...
Monday, January 30, 2012
Sunset over the Ridge
There lies a stillness
on the backside of the ridge
broken by nothing
but the cool lonesome wind
And sitting on the hillside
overlooking the valley
tangled only by briars
and disrupted only by birdsong
there is a peace, wanting to be claimed
Friday, January 27, 2012
Pine Drops
Although the focus these past few months has been on the house-building, it would be a mistake to forget to spend time enjoying how truly beautiful the land is here on the Old Indiana Homestead.
Although solidly winter, here in the middle of January - and raining, to boot - a brief hike yesterday was soul-restoring. The rain let up for a short while, leaving a gentle gray fog on a relatively warm day, and coating the forest in mist and sparkles.
The beech trees held on to their faded orange-white leaves, giving bursts of color to the mostly bleak landscape.
Some of the moss was bright green, adding vibrancy in small doses where they could be found.
And, of course, the ever-green pine trees are all the more glorious when they're not competing with all the other foliage.
Winter hikes are amongst my favorites.
~Dan
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Gene Logson
...on sustainable living...
I remember clearly the day when I was twelve, hunting morel mushrooms with my father, when I informed him excitedly that I had decided to take my dog and my rifle and go deep into the wilderness to live. I would build a cabin on a mountainside by a clear running stream, and live out my days happily on broiled trout, fried mushrooms, and hickory nut pie. I would achieve advanced degrees in the art of living, bestowed on me by Nature, and I would know many things not even Einstein or my stupid schoolteacher dreamed of.
I thought that he would approve, since he was forever retreating to the solitude of woods and river bank and farm field himself But he almost frowned, suggesting gently in a voice that sounded as if he were saying what he thought he was supposed to say, not what he really felt, that I needed to be thinking about making my way in the world and contributing something to it.
Unfortunately I tried to follow his advice and it took me until I was forty-two to realize that I knew what was better for me when I was twelve. And having hunted everywhere for the peculiar kind of freedom I had tried to articulate that day, I came back to my boyhood homethe place of my beginnings-and found it. What I learned in the process was to follow my own mind because worldly wisdom invariably springs from notions that are largely erroneous. The only really good advice that holds up in all situations is: Always make friends with the cook...
The voice of the turtle can be heard again, ringing through the land, as the old Wyandots and Mohegans who once roamed my farm would say-a new surge of creative energy that moves the earth in a direction of self-redemption and sustainability that not the richest PAC nor the oldest institutionalized claptrap can stop.
We are pioneers, seeking a new kind of religious and economic freedom. We flee the evils that centralized power always generates. Our God does not reside in the inner sanctums of cathedrals, but walks with us, hoeing in the fields. Sometimes I see Him checking the bluebird houses for murderous starlings and house sparrows and give Him hell for inventing the nest-robbing bandits. He smiles and reminds me that stupid scientists brought the starling and house sparrow to America, not Him.
We are circumspect about our economic institutions. We do not bank on paper money within marble walls, but invest in sun and soil and sweat and the tools that make sweat more productive.
I think of us as the Ramparts People. In all ages we have camped on the edges of the earth, the buffer between our more conventional and timid brethren and those nether regions where, as the medieval maps instructed, "there be dragons and wild beestes." It is our destiny to draw the dragon's fire while the mainstream culture hides behind its disintegrating deficit and damns us for shattering its complacency. So be it.
The hickory nut pie is excellent.