This morning we put the tomato and pepper seedlings out on the porch again. They've been waiting for the ground to warm up enough to be transplanted, for weeks. It was nearly freezing last night, just above ground, in early May. And now weather forecasters are predicting that La NiƱa might stick around all summer. Bad news for the Atlantic hurricane season, great news for our Pacific fire season, and... sad prospects for my warmer-weather food crops. Climate change is one thing for sure: unpredictable. And along with the weather, our food, finances, and children's futures are all unpredictable, too.
Diversity in the Garden
Our
strategy for dealing with this unpredictability has been to become more
independent. I guess psychologically it's about keeping control of our
own actions, when so much else is now reeling out of control. But
practically speaking, it's also very helpful: The more we learn about
the way we and our needs work, the more capable we are of supporting
ourselves, of creatively solving problems that arise, and of adapting to
our rapidly-changing world. So we're growing many of our own foods now,
unschooling our kids, and diversifying our own skillsets. Put simply,
we're diversifying how we live, just like financial investors diversify
assets. Thrivent says "the idea is to avoid putting all of your eggs in one basket—because something bad could happen to that basket."
We don't have any financial investments, but the same strategy applies
to living, eating, educating ourselves, and planning our future, in
general. So we grow warm weather crops, cool weather crops, fruit trees
of various types, summer crops and winter crops, and root, leaf, flower
and fruit crops. It looks like this year we'll have a lot of potatoes,
celery, spinach, kale, broccoli and cauliflower... and apples, if the
bees do well, which is still in question.
There are a lot of questions, these days. Among them, how to save seeds. I received a newsletter from our local seed supplier recently, in which he explained the importance of diversity in seed-saving:
"We’ve all experienced accelerated climate change and it’s important to prepare for more of the same if we are to have successful harvests. The best strategy can be summed up in one word: Diversify!
"We can be hit by extreme cold, heat, wind or rain at anytime during the growing season. If we can, we should not trust all our seeds to one sowing. We should stagger and expand our plantings as well as planting our crops in both shade and sun. We can also think about working with friends and neighbours to mutually maximize our locations."
~ Dan Jason, Saltspring Seeds
See
that? This is a seed supplier encouraging his customers to grow and
save our own seeds, to share with neighbours, and basically to evolve
away from supporting his seed-growing business. Why? Because obviously,
he and his business will do better if we all do. He's diversifying his
own network of seed-growers and customers, as well as his output. He
also wrote a small book about seed saving, and frequently writes blogs,
articles, newsletters and other things about how to grow plants and
seeds in these changeable times. A greedier businessperson might not
encourage seed-saving, when they can make more money upfront if their
customers remain ignorant about this practice. Dan Jason is looking at
our mutual future, and diversifying all of our prospects, in community. There will always be a place for that.
Diversity in Life and Education
Which
brings me to the human side of this picture: How do we diversify our
own human community; our own skill-sets, to ensure our adaptability as
the world changes around us? I threw out the word unschooling back
there, like it was nothing, and for our family it really is nothing
these days, but I know it's rather out-of-left-field for some people.
Here's what I'm going on about: Unschooling is the practice of allowing
our kids (and ourselves) to explore any and all of their interests, on
their own time, in their own ways, and just seeing what comes out of it
all! Without going too far into our own experiences (read more about our
unschooled young adult children at our blog,
if you like), our family is now reassured that unschooling was an
excellent choice for our kids' future. After many years of determining
and following their own interests, they have become agile thinkers, able
to check in with their own needs, fulfill those needs successfully, and
change course when the need arises. What more can one ask for, in a
future where no career choice is guaranteed, nor even the ground we
stand upon?
But that's our kids--what about us? We're a couple of middle-aged adults, one dependent on a satisfactory job that doesn't meet our evolving ethical standards, and the other now disabled by long-covid. Can we still unschool? The answer is yes, and we've been doing it with our kids these past many years. Our skill-sets have grown as our needs changed, and we find ourselves becoming reasonably adept at growing food, raising and processing chickens, building needed devices, implements and home-improvements, and also learning to live together, twenty-four-seven, peacefully. We're also becoming very good at living more simply, and finding joy in a life far less cluttered by activities and must-haves than it once was. Life is always about unending personal growth--it's just that climate change and related social change have caused us to appreciate that more.
The Aesthetic of Natural Diversity
What
I sometimes struggle to appreciate is the absolute chaos of natural
diversity. I mean when you just let things grow however they're going
to. It's a mess. Truly. My garden, my kids' educational careers, my own
career and even my living room is just truly an absolute mess. But I've
learned to see its beauty.
See this lovely mess of a garden bed? We had an open garden here a week ago, and I heard a few people comment on the number of "weeds" we have. And they're not wrong! But the tone of their comments was. Now that I am coming to understand the importance of diversity in my regenerative garden, this picture is pure joy, to me!
one of the diverse salad-green beds in our garden |
Parenting can be like that, too. When my kids were young, I used to feel irritated by the drifts of toys, costumes, and craft materials that seemed to cover everything. But I also saw how it mirrored the creative mess of my own art studio, and how my kids dug in their mess, explored and improvised, and eventually also desired to tidy it themselves. Now they're older, their social lives are also somewhat of a primordial stew. I look at my own young-adult memories and how different my social life is now than what I thought I was building, at twenty. I have a few of the same friends, but our interests and priorities have changed many times. My children, of course, are no different, even though right now it's hard for them to imagine how life will change them. Their activities are an eclectic chaos of experimental successes and left-behinds. At twenty, our son is paid as a 3D modeller, but also practices music, concept design, drawing, and is a life-long physics and engineering enthusiast. Our seventeen-year-old daughter runs programs for kids, organizes an alternative education festival, publishes a magazine by and for kids, and has recently also begun a side-career as a dog-trainer. Three or four years ago I could not have predicted many of these directions, but our kids found them and followed them with enthusiasm, and that has set them up for success in our unpredictable world. They're accustomed to wrangling interests and commitments in multiple different directions. They're accustomed to changing course when needs demand it. Our kids' comfort and ease with this chaotic, changeable lifestyle is the gift that unschooling gave them. As our social climate becomes more chaotic, they will fit right in.
The Struggle of Allowing
Then there's the concept of allowing.
I'm not really as comfortable with all this as I make it sound. Excited
by the prospects; reassured by preliminary observations--yes! But I
fight change like the devil, and I am not good at just going with the
flow. I'm a child of the eighties. I thought I would pick a career and
stick to it forever; have kids who went to school, grew up through
birthday parties and grocery shopping and family holidays, and I'd
always live a typical low-to-middle-class family life. I also thought
Caesar salad would always be easy to buy. Now lettuce is too expensive,
eggs for the dressing are even more expensive, chickens are dying by the
hundreds of thousands in their barns from flooding and bird flu, and
I'm allergic to croutons. Damn. I had to allow my palate to change with
the times.
Sometimes allowing my kids to make choices I don't
understand or necessarily agree with feels like gluing my back to the
wall; peeling my eyes from the view and willing my voice to fall back
into my throat. I pound down my own fears to let my kids thrive or fall
flat on their faces. It's like letting the weeds and lettuce seedlings
stay under the dominating squash leaves, knowing they'll just die there,
but that their failed lives will feed the squash. And then discovering
that one of them grew and fed my family, anyway. Allowing is when I know
for sure I could make things better in the short term if I just take
control, but I also know that I can't see all the variables, so any
control I think I have is just a sham, anyway. As our world becomes ever
less predictable, I can't predict how my controlling actions will play
out in my garden, my life, my kids' education, or even this article. So I
force myself to quit trying.
Luckily I've diversified my needs and the seeds I plant, and am learning to cooperate with the changing climate.
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