Sunday, October 25, 2015

Canticle of the Feathered Ones


Earth moves in a mysterious way, her wonders to unfold. 

The wonders of it all are more poignant this year, as my time with the Center for Courage and Renewal (CCR) increases.

It’s difficult to explain to people “what happens” in a Circle of Trust. The idea of reading poems and reflecting on them sounds more like a college literature course where the poems are “workshopped” with a critical and intellectual lens. It’s different with Courage work, where the poem “works” YOU! And it’s not an intellectual working, rather a spiritual one.


I am the academician and farmer. Growing up on the farm, reading was leisure and there was little time for that. Poetry, I don’t really remember any. The same went for flowers. The land was for producing crops to eat and sell. Mom had a few geraniums in front of the house. But the garden was for vegetables. Row upon row of food for the body.

My first Courage to Teach retreat was a year long seasonal offering with 12 other teachers, K-16.  My research was on Teaching and Learning. I loved pedagogy. This was my sabbatical year and I was anxious to learn some new techniques. I remember asking the facilitator on that second weekend (I had missed the first so I felt behind) what I was supposed to DO during the 2 hours of reflective/free time.  I don’t remember how many times and different ways she answered my question – I couldn’t hear it.  It was a concept as foreign to me as reading fiction for pleasure – or a fertile field of flowers simply for the sake of beauty. She finally put her hand on my shoulder, gave a supportive and knowing chuckle and said; “Paula, that’s why this is called a retreat and not a workshop.” I was far from home!

I confess I spent the first 2 retreats in the series of 5, a skeptic.  That was almost 3 years, and several Courage retreats, ago.  

I am not a different person. I still grow lots of vegetables, read mostly things that will inform my work, and am driven with “to do” lists that spin in my head much of the time. BUT, now I plant flowers, I read poetry, I understand retreat – and I can feel when my soul needs to be fed.

An August Courage to Teach retreat in Duluth with my UMD colleagues and others, allowed a visit to Nammah by my mentor, Debbie Stanley. I am now a full fledged facilitator - ready to fly!
In September, a collaboration with another Courage colleague, Winton Boyd, at Wisdom Ways, featured Sara and her music. The integration of music, live and engaged music, into my work with Courage has been a dream an intention all along. The theme of Leaf Falling, Bud Forming inspired an original piece for the retreat. We sang, we moved, we reflected on what we were letting go of and what new was forming, ready to winter over.

In the meantime, Nammah is preparing her wintering over. The melancholy that putting her to bed brings is softened when I remember the requisite
Hidden Seed deep in the dark soil of the earth. Fertile Ground, Womb of the Night, bring us new birth (lyrics from Sara's song Darkness Cover Me). 
Along with the melancholy, there is a sense of hope and releif that in this time of darkness and rest, her wonders will again unfold come spring. What lies in waiting!

It WAS another summer of abundance for Nammah and her homestead. While the focus was on the feathered ones, Nammah herself was full of splendor.


























The feathered ones, aka (Icelandic Chickens) have multiplied from 8 to 15 in our first year. Each new hatch seemed to stimulate more construction in what is now known as the Hen Hilton!

The summer of chicks also drew a variety of young visitors - from L.A. and San Francisco, CA; Austin, TX; Seattle, WA and Duluth, MN








As well as some not so young visitors from South Dakota.

My recent retreats, as participant, with CCR included themes of the feathered ones, along with the notion of sanctuary. Nammah IS a sanctuary, for us, her visitors as well as the many feathered and non-feathered ones she hosts. A Canticle of the Feathered Ones. 

As I enter into this season of decline, pondering the already formed buds that will be wintering over, I also think about the seeds that are scattered by the feathered ones. This year, we had random sunflowers in unintended paces. As well as those planted with great intention.

What strikes me is the unknown of where, or even what, will emerge - Seeds that the birds have planted. Sometimes it is the unintended seeds that grow into the most magnificent flowers!

Winter is on her way. What lies in waiting?


She fashions beauty out of clay, like straw spun into gold.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Summer 2015

I want to plant a little garden with you now
Take care of a piece of the earth somehow
And tend it when we're old and gray and
Try to straighten up and say, well,
I'm so glad to see you today
Hey baby hey baby hey baby hey 
(Greg Brown lyrics to Hey Baby Hey)

The chickens are reproducing like bunnies! This time we only gave the broody hen 2 eggs to sit on (since all 4 hatched last time). Sure enough - both eggs turned into little chicks on June 24. We now have 3 different ages of chickens - and the initial batch isn't even a year old yet!

So of course a bigger coop was needed. Fortunately Sara is a handy gal.  Our pal Trish came helped too. They decided to call themselves Close Enough Construction.

Frey loves his new digs and feels like a real king!

But this is Nammah's blog and SHE is certainly in reproduction mode as a well! Everything was planted by June 13.  It felt late given the nice weather earlier. But frost visited twice the first week of June. 

A new red bistro set allows us to have our morning coffee while we watch her grow
Now we water, weed and wait! It's a good thing we have a sweet place to hang out! We are blessed with abundance!!
As Sara and I celebrate our 5th wedding anniversary on the very day the US Supreme Court declared same sex marriage legal in all 50 states-
Even Frey is celebrating!
You get to me like old time religion did
In my heart when I was a kid
You're sweet gospel music to my ears
You know how to ease all my fears
And from my heart to yours all I can say is
Hey baby hey baby hey baby hey


Friday, May 8, 2015

Spring Returns



Though spring begins slowly and tentatively, it grows with a tenacity that never fails to touch me. The smallest and most tender shoots insist on having their way, coming up through ground that looked, only a few weeks earlier, as if it would never grow anything again.  (Parker J. Palmer, from Seasons: A Center for Renewal)


What a difference a season makes! Spring arrived early this year. Much has happened since the last blog.  The hens are laying beautiful eggs. They LOVE to roam about the yard and the perimeter of the woods. And Nammah is waking from her time in darkness, returning to light and fertile soil.


One garden bed was planted in easy april this year - covered with plastic. The greens inside didn't poke their heads out for almost a month anyway. The soil just would get warm enough. Early May and the first planting of greens are showing signs of hope and abundance to come.

The chickens have ended up at the front door more than once! Sara thinks they want to return to the pantry where they spend their first month.

Hans Jacob found a new flock in Wisconsin. He was a beautiful and very protective rooster. A bit too protective. He had all of the hens (including the human ones) in a state of fear and chaos. We decided it was best to send him off to bigger flocks. We hear he is doing well.

Frey is now the top dog (yes, even over Hannah). He has a much looser approach to things than HJ did. He does a fine job though.

His most notable achievement…4 baby chics!

They weren't planned. We already had more chickens than we originally "wanted". But...Little Robin Red Breast was acting strange. She wouldn't leave the nesting box - just sat there and clucked all day.  Our guys at Whippoorwill Farms said "she wants to be a mom - give her some eggs to sit on."  So we marked 4 eggs and allowed her to sit, and sit, and sit and sit!  Wow - what dedication that mama had.  We thought even if 1 or 2 hatched it would be fun. See what happens.

21 days exactly, 2 chics (on cinco de mayo) - the next day, 2 more. They are the cutest things. And watching mama do her thing is an absolute wonder.
The seeds are all planted and under grow lights.  I feel ahead of schedule this year.  The early spring is motivating.

We will still be cautious and not put them out until the first week in June. One never knows up here!



May 8 - Along with the greens - potatoes, beets, carrots AND sunflowers are all planted. It's nice to have the time, sun and workable soil to plant a bit here and there. It feels more relaxed this year…so far!
The days get longer, the winds get warmer, and the world grows green again (Parker J. Palmer, from Seasons: A Center for Renewal).  Good bye to winter - you may hit the road!