Saturday, October 17, 2009

village life

We are really glad to get out of town once a week and go to visit our friend in the village. It's about an hour and a half on the bus from here to get out there. Once we are there it feels like a lifetime away from the world we know. There's no store out there, no public square, no internet, (unless we connect with our cell phones, which I don't bother to do!)
When we arrive the first one to greet us is usually Bruce barking up a storm.


From it takes a village
Here is Bruce trying to defend his supper dish from a Chinese pig. This poor dog suffers all kinds of indignities, even the chickens are bold enough to try to rob his supper dish!

From it takes a village

With young people moving to town to find work and better possibilities there are lots of Ukrainian villages that are quite uninhabited, but that's not the case with this place.  However there are some homes left empty when the occupants go away for the winter.  Maybe I should say empty nests.

From it takes a village
Svitlana, our friend, has a strip of land in front of her house where she can plant potatoes and beets and whatever else she wants to grow. 

From it takes a village
This week we helped her mow the strip to the left in this picture.  I'd never used a scythe before, never thought I'd ever master that skill, but she and I mowed 10/100 of a hectare together. (1000 meters squared, about the whole length of the field, almost to the trees)  It took us about an hour.  When we started I had no hope of finishing, glad we were doing it together!  You can see the scythe in this picture:

From it takes a village
This picture from http://www.vtcommons.org/files/images/scythe.gif is easier to see.  The trick is she told me is to swing it and aim the "heel" to the earth, when I started doing it that way I couldn't believe how it cleared a huge swath in front of me.  In time it became quite normal to take a step and swing my arms, take another step and swing my arms and watch the greens tumble from their mowed down stalks.  That was 2 days ago, and yes, my arms are still sore!
What I found very interesting is that the field was sown with something she calls "oil radishes", people sow their fields with radishes, mow the field then plow the crop under.  This is done instead of fertilizing the ground.  It seems that farmers at home are doing something similar as well.  Click here for the story.
bye! thanks for listening!

Friday, October 16, 2009

Askold and Dir



From it takes a village
Askold and Dir were 2 rulers of ancient Kiev according to myths with some hazy historical documentation by the Arab historian al Masudi.  Anyway it seems a fun name for these 2 Chinese pigs of Svitlana's.  They are cute little pigs, don't eat much because they're small, and they like to tear around the yard like puppies when they play!

From it takes a village




And this is a real living tomato from Svitlana. I had never eaten a sprouting tomato before.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Push ups again

Exactly one year and one month ago I posted this.  Back then I could do about 2 push ups at a time, so I could with great difficulty do 5 sets of 2 push ups.  I was inspired by this webpage and followed the program for about a month or so before I got distracted with life.  The other day I tried to see how many I could do, and now I can do 10 pushups!  So - in about 10 years and 10 months I should be able to do 100 pushups?