Tom Stock

Poet, Essayist, Photographer, Naturalist

His Laugh

It bellows with volume

You sure can hear from quite far off

The whole farm laughs with him

What could be better than to fertilize

The soil with laughter

To weed under the hot sun with his laughs

It nourishes the produce

A chuckle is for sissies

A hearty laugh.. the whole world hears

His diaphragm is strong from laughing

It pushes up full strength air

That vibrates those vocal cords

With bombastic, full sized, firm laughs

He defines laughter

Vibrating air that comes from joy

 

Poem From a Plowed Field

Up from the soil – out of the darkness

Chocolaty loam – the womb incubator

Velvet loam – soft, fertile, ready

Seeds just planted – water to soften their coat

Seedlings first primal leaves, then true leaves

Farmers boots – walks by checking

Compost – decayed organics, full of nutrients

Sunshine – warmth for growth

Weeds – rushing in to take their place

Hands – volunteers weeding, planting, tilling

 

Look To Soil

In an open, brown field,

Dark brown from recent rain.

Furrows run north-south.

It rests in early November

From roots that have sucked its fertility.

I stand in its center,

Look in all directions,

Feel feet sink into its softness.

This triggers a longing

To return to the garden

To press two fingers against thumb,

Push them into the dirt,

See if it is dry enough

To transplant, make furrows, dibble holes

Rake, cultivate, fertilize;

Plant, weed, harvest.

 

 

 

 

Awakening of Cheerful Feelings on Arriving in the Country

 

(Title from the 2nd movement of Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony)

 

Even as I leave the car

And walk across the lawn

I can feel the difference

 

There are open views

Garden beds

A long line of maples

The drama of clouds

 

There is instant palpable relief here

I have entered Homecoming Farm

An oasis in North Amityville

Where Dominican Nuns

Live with ravens

 

The stress of driving here is gone

Small problems remain in the parking lot

I hear faint conversations of two women

Weeding the leek bed.

 

I see the produce ready for pick up

The volunteers are smiling, laughing,

Everyone seems at ease

 

Although the farm is a remnant of what one was

A patchwork quilt of farms a century ago

The Dominicans are keeping the tradition

Of growing, healthy, organic food

And cultivating cheerful feelings

 

 

 

 

 

Homecoming Organic Farm Journal: July, 25, 2017

Nancy and I weeded an onion bed. Weeds crowded right up the blue-green stalks. It was difficult weeding. I developed a technique that worked for me. I nimbly fingered my way through the weeds until I touched the onion stalk. Then I grasped a handful of weeds and yanked. The soil was wet and the weeds took a good chunk of soil with them. It was slow going.

 

The sky was cloudy and the temperature 70 degrees with a moderate wind from the west. It was comfortable yet a bit chilly. Steve was the dedicated mower guy. He’s gotten this job by doing it week by week. Keeping “weed pressure” at bay is the primary task of the work/share crew. All told, there are 70 people involved with the farm. Nancy and I are scheduled for the Tuesday pickup.

 

Don asked me to join the garlic crew. We were situated at a table just outside the garlic shed. The crew included Mitch, Jonathan, me, Jane Ann, and Ana. We have many crates yet to process. We were clipping off the stalks and roots and removing the outer layer of thin tissue. Don came by to check up “Don’t clean all the tissues. No one wants them.”

 

Don related his “I saved a rabbit story.” “I was moving one of the fallow plots when a rabbit crossed my path and jumped out onto the open lawn. Just then, a hawk swooped down to attack. I interfered and the hawk flew off. I saved a rabbit.”

 

I have designated Nella as “Queen of the Herb/Flower Garden.”  I’ve seen her there several times. The two gardens are taking shape with her weeding. “I found a skeleton” she said. She showed me the spot. I lifted the skull. It was a rabbit. Magnificent large white lilies are in bloom.

 

Our share included okra, beets, kale, Japanese turnip, garlic, eggplant, cucumber, garlic scapes, and hot peppers. There is no better place to be than out in the open air with a community of wonderful, like minded people.

 

 

Women in White, Dancing

Women in white dancing
Long, light, fleecy gowns
Twirls, swirls,
Spins, and swings
In a dim basement
We watch from the sidelines
They float in space
Flakes in a snow shower
Dancing on a dark floor
A dozen of them
A ballet of white
Rising and falling
I in white stockings
Graceful, flying
A mirage, a dream
Float, and join, and part

Notes From Our Garden and Homecoming Farm – Mid July 2017

MY GARDEN

  • Tomato plants four feet high, too close together, plenty of yellow blossoms but…where are the bees? 13 green tomatoes; water twice a day because of high temperatures
  • Swiss chard about 6 inches
  • One lone phlox plant that I started from seed
  • Two cucumber vines producing lots of Kirby “cukes.” Nancy has a recipe for dill pickles
  • Beans starting to slow down; in the search for pods, the plants take a beating
  • Merlo lettuce starting to bolt
  • Zinnias in full regalia. I cut the first bouquet today, 12 stems all with a different color – Johnnies packet called “Cactus Blend”
  • The center island bursting with the color of black eyes Susan’s and beautiful, lavender bee balm. But…where are the bees?
  • Mountain mint blooming and well as spearmint
  • Ornamental peppers, very small, growing, but not in fruit yet – small one inch orange, carrot-like and hot
  • Queen Ann’s Lace in full bloom
  • Grapes full size but green
  • Rosemary doing well, as well as horse radish and beet greens
  • Transplanted 21 orange milkweed seedlings started from a pod I found on a plant near Cedar Beach on Jones Beach
  • Jack in the pulpit seeds beginning to sprout after waiting seven months.
  • Harvested oak leaf lettuce, enough for two salads
  • Pulled onions that were not as large as last year because of the vigorous growth of a Tulip Tree I brought from Manorville
  • Red Osier Dogood in bloom
  • Crab apple tree leaves have galls
  • Cottontail rabbit sighted on lawn for the past two weeks
  • Day lilies flowering

A Brief History of Clouds

Infant Earth birthed Her first cloud
After waiting millions of years
For Her hot steam to escape a cooling globe.

Finally, Her vapors condensed into droplets.
Forming a thick, solid cloud layer
Completely shrouding Her body
Like a naked woman,
Who, surprised by an intruder, robes in modesty.

At Moss Lake

Dragonflies dangle above the shoreline
An osprey is silhouetted near its’ island nest
 
A nearly full moon pushes over the tree line
Two bull frogs duet nearby
Adult loon leads her young
On a mat of fog suspended over the water
 
I sit on the bank surrounded by silence
At Moss Lake in the Adirondacks

Heart of a Cloud

Be surrounded
With tolerable information

White interior of a cloud
Insulated from news broadcasts,
Cell phone interruptions,
Instant messages on i-pad

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