The waning time of year

At this time of year, after the Fall Equinox and before the Winter Solstice, I always feel very low energy.  The days are getting progressively shorter, it’s colder, it’s often too wet to work in the gardens, even if there was much to do, which hopefully there isn’t any more.  I’m definitely in hibernation mode and I feel myself sinking into slumber…But of course, in our modern times, there’s no allowance for this seasonal shift, there’s no time to rest!  Deadlines continue, students are diligently attending school, appointments must be made, etc.  So I take my Vitamin D3, shake my head and do my best to keep up (but maybe I go to bed just a bit earlier).  For me, surrounded by annual and biennial plants as my companions, it only seems natural to “die back” a little, to sink energy into my roots and rest there for a time.  After all, spring will demand a huge outburst of energy, and it will come soon enough.  Surely I must rest while I can so that I’m ready to spring into action when the days start to lengthen again!  Just as there are lunar cycles each month, there are seasonal cycles through the year.  True seasonal autumn (as opposed to the pumpkin-spice latte season) feels like the waning time, like just before the New Moon.  I love it, I don’t feel depressed by it!  But I wish I could honour it properly by going back to bed!

Volunteer Work Bee Wrap-Up 2023

On October 14 we celebrated our volunteers with some delicious ground cherries and some corn silk tea made over the fire! They were much more active than the sleepy bees pictured here, slurping up the last of this asters’ nectar between naps! Can you find all 12 bees?

We had twelve intrepid participants who came from Tyendinaga and from nearby settler communities of Belleville and Kingston to help out. This has been about the average number of participants through the year, although our spring work bees definitely attracted the largest numbers, and included whole families from babies to elders! This work bee also had all life stages present from youth (12 yrs old) to her grandmother. We try our best to have volunteer tasks for all abilities – there is always so much to do! This time we cleared out and burned European buckthorn, pulled all the ornamental annuals from the containers, and weeded the biennial crops that will stay in the ground over winter. Nyawen:kowa volunteers! Hope to see you all again next year!

Harvest 2023

We have just brought in the last of the peppers, not all of which will ripen for seed. Most importantly, the corn is in, drying down under cover. This year, we grew the Oronya Nikanenstoten, which has been grown in the community by at least one grower for many years. It is a beauty! Many other crops were very successful in the dry fall we experienced this year: beans dried down perfectly on their stalks, lettuces had lots of time to produce seed, and our carrot, leek and beet seeds all came in perfectly ripe and dry. We grew the Buffalo Creek squash for the first time using seed from one of our Board members, and it seems happy. We were able to share tomatoes and ground cherries with the community Good Food box program and still got lots of seeds as well!

This Saturday October 14, weather permitting, will be our final volunteer workbee, from 10-noon in the gardens. Hope you can join us – we will have the fire going this time and enjoy some corn silk tea together. If it is raining, this event will be cancelled, so please check!

-Cate