This post originally appeared at HOMEGROWN.org
A change of seasons on the peninsula marks another end to a busy
summer with seasonal residents and visitors packed and transported back
to their hectic lives and kids tucked back in school. A general settling
in for autumn and winter is underway.
Lobstermen are pulling or moving traps, the village has slowed to a more relaxed pace. The line at
the Village Ice Cream shop has disappeared. As the squeaky red door
bangs shut behind you deciding between Ginger or Blueberry Heaven,
Strawberry Cheesecake or Espresso Fudge is not so rushed. As you linger
on the tiny painted stool and chat with the friendly gal that just gave
you the sample to taste, she dips you an extra scoop after you decide on
a flavor, even though you only asked for a single.
Days at Bittersweet start with feeding and milking and then the girls and I
take a walk. I open the back fences and we wander through the path that
takes me to my secret place, tucked in the woods. It’s an old path that
was used to excavate granite years ago. Along the way my long legged
charges nibble on the high and low bush blueberries, gnawing greedily on
pine branches to take in all the rich minerals that keep them healthy
and strong. Sea Princess’s bright eyes seem to get bigger and bigger as
she enjoys this time together with her herd mates.
Maeve, Colleen, Mairead and Sweet Pea munch their way with us, enjoying shoots of
goldenrod in full yellow bloom. In Ireland, the sheep eat a plant called
gorse. It’s a shrub that blooms early in spring with a soft yellow
color that deepens as the summer goes on. It’s also covered in thorns
but somehow they ignore the rugged prickles and drink in the plant. An
old farmer told me once gorse is what makes sheep’s wool soft. It was
the same farmer who told me to count the black sheep in the pastures. He
said you can tell how rich a farmer is in wool by the number of black
sheep. For every hundred white ones, there’ll be one black. I had one
black sheep in my flock, she’s now joined by a young black ram but I’m
still 95 sheep away from being rich in wool. It takes time to build
flocks and herds.
A visitor came by the farm stand last week. I just happened to be loading
up for a Grange Hall Fair, packing in my lavender bunches, goats milk
soaps, jars of heirloom cucumber pickles, wool. He paid me the highest
compliment I can imagine. He went in to the farm stand to buy soap for
his Mother whom he was visiting. We talked about where he was from, I
told him about the Grange Hall Fair tomorrow and invited him to come. As
we stood outside the stand, he glanced out over the pasture where my
Royal Palm Tom, a mixture of hens, Colleen and Maeve were all grazing.
Then he said “it’s obvious you enjoy what you’re doing, you can feel the
love here”. I tried not to let tears spring to my eyes.
Just this morning, after I’d finished cleaning stalls, filling them with fresh
shavings which the girls immediately started dancing around in, clean
sheets I like to call it, all four of my Ewes came to the door to look
in and see what all the fun was about. I decided to take a flake of hay
out and put it in their rack, a mid morning treat. I smile each time I
do this for them because they dance right along with me, bumping me
along the way, sometimes half leaping in the air and doing a half twist
before they land back down. There is a connection between us, maybe it’s
just that I’m the hand that feeds them but on days when I’m inside and I
look out and catch one of them looking at the kitchen window, the one
where they know they can see me best, I have to think it’s more than
just that.
I’ve added a ram to the flock. He’s a wonderful, sweet
boy born last spring. As my fellow farmer and I brought him up from his
pasture to load him in the back of my Volvo, Brian gently guided him
along, stopping when the boy I call Little Man paused as he was unsure
of being away from the flock. Brian said “this is all new to him, I’ll
let him take his time.” This over 6 foot man bent down and gently
nuzzled the little boys cheek, planted a kiss on his head and waited.
Slowly, my new charge started moving again. When we reached the car,
Brian gently wrapped his long arms around him, planted another kiss on
his head and gently placed him in the back of the wagon. I’ve seen lots
of farms and met lots of farmers. There are a few who stand out. I don’t
know how the ram felt but I know it was important to this man to in
these moments to treat this scared 6 month old boy as if he were the
only sheep in the world. We continue the nuzzling of cheeks and kisses
on the head each morning just as a reminder he’s come home.
Farming is an occupation that speaks to the heart. Whether you’re growing crops
or tending beasts, it keeps you close to what’s important, treating all
living things well. My heart glows even while my muscles ache, my back
feels like it’s broken and some days I’m so tired, supper is made up of a
bowl of ice cream or popcorn. The aches and pains seem to diminish when
I’m strolling through the woods or sitting in the barn with the animals
who’ve come to trust me to tend them with loving kindness. That
kindness is returned to me each day in the form of gentle nuzzles, nose
to nose kisses and longing glances directed at my kitchen window. I
think I know how my LIttle Man feels. Those exchanges remind me I’ve
come home.
Dyan Redick, Bittersweet Heritage Farm
I describe myself as an accidental farmer with a purpose. My farm, located on the St. George peninsula of
Maine is a certi?ed Maine State Dairy. I offer cheeses made with milk from my registered Saanen goat
herd, a seasonal farm stand full of wool from my Romney cross ?ock, goats milk soaps, lavender,
woolens and whatever else strikes my fancy. Bittersweet Heritage Farm is an extension of my belief that
we should all gain a better understanding of our food source, our connection to where we live and to the
animals with whom we share the earth.