Potato Blossom Reflections

Dateline: 1 July 2008

The price of oil is skyrocketing. Inflation and fiscal foolishness is ravaging the economy. Our nation is bogged down in a foreign war that we can’t win. Our culture is morally adrift. And we are politically bereft. Powerful forces are at work in the world.

There is nothing much I can do to change those “big picture” problems. So I find myself focusing my attention and directing my efforts into areas where I can make a significant difference: on my land, within my family, and through my Christian faith.

There are all kinds of good things happening within that personal paradigm. For example, potato blossoms are beginning to burst forth in my garden.

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Potato blossoms are particularly special to this deliberate agrarian. That’s because I come from a long line of potato farmers. Part of me is Scots-Irish. I’m quite certain some of my kin came here during the Irish Potato Famine of the middle 1800s. My mother’s father was a potato farmer in Aroostook County, Maine. My grandfather Kimball, from the same town, was not a potato farmer but his father was. Pretty much everybody with roots that go back in that part of the country have potato farmers in their lineage.

I spent boyhood summers in Fort Fairfield, Maine with my grandparents. Every July for something like 60 years that town has had a Potato Blossom Festival. It’s a big event for a little town way up in the top of the state. My Grandmother Kimball lived in town and I have fond memories of festival time.

I also remember the potato blossoms that were being celebrated. Miles and miles of roads, lined with acres and acres of fields, containing so many long rows of spaced and hilled potatoes, all abloom. What a sight.

Now I satisfy myself with three rows of potatoes in my home garden.

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As you can see, my plants are not in full blossom yet. But, as you can also see, they sure are growing well. I planted the seed in a trench about 4” deep. I kept the weeds hoed and hilled the soil up on the sides two times as the plants grew. They are now around 42” high and the foliage is lush. Amazingly, I haven’t seen a single potato beetle!

People have commented about how good my potato plants are doing. They wonder what I’ve fertilized them with and if, perhaps, I fertilized them too much.

Well, I haven’t fertilized them with anything. I did spread leaves raked from the yard over that ground last fall, and then spread some ashes from the wood stove in the winter, and then tilled it all up in the spring. But that was it. No fertilizer was used, and no bug spray either.

So, in all honesty, I can’t claim I have any special growing wisdom or ability beyond planting and hoeing and hilling. That these potatoes have done so well is purely because of God’s grace, and I am humbled. Surely I don’t deserve potato plants like that. They are a gift and a delight that I am most thankful for.

What I like about these potato plants, besides their beautiful blossoms and abundant green foliage, is that the tubers now developing underground will feed my family through this next winter. It so happens that potatoes (and onions) are a large part of our diet. Potatoes are nutritious food and they store just fine by simply putting them in crates in our cool basement. No canning, or freezing, or drying is needed.

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Potato blossoms remind me of the best days of my youth. My world was different then, before I grew up and took on the responsibilities of being an adult, a father, and the provider for my family, before I matured beyond my prime and, one day, woke up to find I had become a 50-year-old man.

I had a lot of energy, a lot of drive, a lot of focus and determination when I was a younger man. Those things are, however, now ebbing from my life, ever so slowly, but ever so surely. That sounds kind of morbid, but it's true. I don’t like it. I don’t like it a bit.

Being a husband and father is sometimes easy and sometimes hard. Working my day job is sometimes easy and sometimes hard. Running a home-based mail order business and chicken plucker parts manufacturing business is sometimes easy and sometimes hard. Working in my garden and around the homestead to be more self-sufficient is sometimes easy and sometimes hard. Everything else there is to do in my life is sometimes easy and sometimes hard. Lately, though, it’s all been hard.

I am perpetually tired. I find myself struggling against the reality of minor but increasingly irksome limitations. I am tormented by so many creative ideas, by wanting to do so many things, and to achieve so many goals. But, more often than not, I spin my wheels and make little progress. It is discouraging.

I want to be a carefree little boy again—spending the summer with my grandparents, surrounded by those fields of potato blossoms, surrounded by the security and love I knew there. But, alas, there is no going back. We can never go back. We can only remember, and thank God for the memories, and press on.

At times like this, when I have made my life busier and more complicated than it should be, God impresses upon me the need to reevaluate, refocus, and, ultimately, recapitulate.

That is what I feel led to do for this month of July. It is time for a blog fast—a period of time during which I will not blog. Instead, I will refocus on the “faith” part of this blog’s descriptive subtitle.

I will, Lord willing, return to blogging here on August 2nd. I look forward to continuing our dialogue then. Here’s wishing you and yours a blessed July.

Herrick Kimball

11 comments:

  1. I will look forward to seeing you "pop up" on Bloglines again. Your writing greatly blesses me. (Although I have had to take blog vacations, too!)

    My husband and I have talked a lot about the lack of energy we have at this stage in life. We never appreciated what we had in our youth, it was just... normal.

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  2. Your blog has become our bedtime reading material... Alas, Alack! Enjoy your break; we look forward to your return.

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  3. We always plant a big garden, and now you inspired me to give potatoes a try next year. Thanks.

    God Bless.
    MomToCherubs
    http://www.becksbounty.blogspot.com

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  4. AnonymousJuly 02, 2008

    Kimball,
    Keep your spirits up. You are a light in this world.

    Brian

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  5. AnonymousJuly 02, 2008

    Herrick,

    You are such an inspiration! I have been reading you for several months now and enjoy your archives as much as your current posts. Together they have challenged me to begin to make intentional steps toward the lifestyle I have pondered for so long. You have also inspired me to Blog about this process as I undertake it. If you ave the chance, please check out my Blog at www.wayhaven.blogspot.com

    Blessings to you and yours.

    Daniel

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  6. Hi Herrick,
    Beautiful potatoes! We didn't put in potatoes this year, but when we do, we have a nice cool cellar to store them. I get to join your age bracket as I turn 50 this summer in August. A half century of life for us, purely by God's grace. Wonder what He has planned for the second half? He so lovingly blessed us with Anna Rose, our eight year old daughter, who helps keep me feeling young even as my body slows down. She is truly a free spirit and I so enjoy seeing life through her eyes. I hope when she is my age she will have many joyful memories to savor. I bet your boys will. Don't be cumbered by your limitations! I've learned (the hard way) to focus on what I CAN do, and be thankful for it. Godliness with contentment is great gain. Enjoy what you have, teach your boys what you know, and revel in the harvest when it comes. Have a blessed July with your family! Love in Jesus, Emily

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  7. AnonymousJuly 02, 2008

    Herrick,
    I have not written here before, but have been reading your blog for a few months. Thank you for your encouragement. I am only 37, but being a mother, wife, and homeschooler, I find life gets more muddled each year. There is always more I would like to achieve than there is time in the day. God has been reminding me that my home is really with Him after all. What we do here is important, but we must not lose the reality that we are living here with a purpose that ends in another place. Enjoy your time with Him. May it be a refreshing time.

    Heather

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  8. AnonymousJuly 03, 2008

    Although you will be missed, it will only be for a short while. I look forward to your returning to the blog. Please take your "away time" to rest and recharge....enjoy your family and your fabulous garden. Your posts always inspire me and make me think. This is my first comment on your blog. I just wanted to let you know that I wish you a wonderful month off.

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  9. Herrick,

    I, too, have had times when I got overwhelmed with what almost felt like responsibilities to things that really weren't even responsibilities at all as compared to my duty to my family and farm. Sometimes you just have to take a break, sometimes it's a long break. Just take one day and one chore at a time.

    Judy

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  10. AnonymousJuly 03, 2008

    Hi Herrick, I wanted to say hello and thank you for writing this blog.I find it encouraging and entertaining especially the stories about the "Fort".I am the son of Geoffrey Barker.My uncle Gerald Barnes was a potato farmer in the Fort for many years.Well enjoy your break and I'll look forward to your return.

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  11. AnonymousJuly 09, 2008

    Thanks for all you share.

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