Felled like Firewood

Jack and I wanted a wood stove. Our friends Randy and Lisa spotted the perfect wee one at a clearance sale at our local farm store. One hour later, Jack and I were arguing over whether to put it in the house or in our historic jail outbuilding. (Keep you posted.) The recreational value of a lovely evening fire, so cozy, so romantic. We looked forward to these intimate evenings.

This is what it is supposed to look like

Which meant it was time to gather the firewood. You get it in the early spring and let it dry over the year so it can be used next year. Friends who had stopped using their fireplace offered us their woodpile, already cured. A great kindness! We fetched the first half of that, and I googled “how to stack a woodpile.” The result came out similar to a drunken beaver building a bachelor pad, but I was proud of it.

We then began to notice how many people were advertising free firewood online, come and cut it. Woot! Free wood??!! Steep learning curve followed. In return for one of Jack’s famous curry dinners, Randy came with a maul to show us how to split up pieces I first collected from such an advert. They proved too big to go into the stove. After splitting several pieces of the elm I had collected, which is pretty hard to split, he brought a bit of white pine over and had us give it a go.

Mauls will bounce, did you know that? Also, aim is an acquired skill. The third time, I actually hit the wood. I hit it again and again, in a new place each chop, for nine more tries. Jack… we won’t talk about that. The bleeding stopped almost immediately.

“There is a reason people advertise free firewood if you cut and haul it yourself,” Randy said as he finished up the plausible logs with his maul. “People–WHACK–don’t want–WHOMP–to pay–THUD–for someone–KERCHUNK–to haul it–WHACK–away.”

Got it. Next idea, a recently divorced friend is gathering her firewood now too and we decided to share the ride and the chainsaw and have fun doing it together. First ride out to a town about twenty minutes away, she continued Randy’s lesson about wood we wanted and wood we didn’t: locust good, white pine, bad.

We arrived at a house that turned out to be fairly amazing. Hoarders, is the word. The trailer windows were blocked with stuff piled high. It took fifteen minutes to find the woodpile under a boat at the edge of a bamboo patch (they told us they wouldn’t be home, just help ourselves). I had carried about half of it to the car when Dawn said, “This is white pine. You don’t want to burn this inside. Too hot and fast. It will make kindling, though.”

Kindling, like chop it up with an ax or maul? Aloud I said, “Well, I can figure it out.” Is my insurance policy up to date? Can I bribe Randy with double curry?

As we turned around with a last load, a man stood there. He didn’t say anything.

“We at the right house?” I smiled, prepared to drop everything and run.

He nodded. “Take it all. Don’t leave none.” He turned and went into the trailer.

We might have left some. It felt a bit film noir, all of a sudden.

Next morning, I woke up sneezing, eyes nearly swollen shut, unable to breathe through my nose. I have rarely in my life suffered from allergies, but apparently 2021 had plans for most of the population; lots of people who don’t normally have them are. Three lost days later, I was still taking every over the counter thing that offered relief, and downing herbal supplements. I don’t remember much else, except our friend Nora dropped by.

“You know, people sell firewood,” Nora said, eyeing me from across the room as I projectile sneezed. “It’s not that expensive. I have mine delivered. It’s not, like, a moral failing to not gather your own.”

What could be nicer than a wood stove’s lovely fire on a winter’s evening? Dialing a local supplier and watching them stack locust behind your shed.

(Addendum: Dawn and I are going to cut chestnut behind her house this week. She has a chainsaw. I have a mask and allergy meds. What could possibly go wrong?)

Because I Can: Wendy gets unapologetically Grumpy

Over the past couple months I have posted some joyful pictures of my canning successes. (In true social media fashion, no one will ever see the failures.)

In response to these, I got an unexpected and significant amount of cautious questions and some condescending dismissals, like “well I wouldn’t bother with that because it’s cheap at the store, but if you want to be a prepper, be my guest.” And “why are you doing so much canning?”

Social media is one of those weird places where, if you put it out there, you can’t control reactions, nor should you want to. It’s also one of those places where what you think of as happy gets commented on by people who enjoy spreading misery, or who believe their candles will burn brighter if they throw cold water on your flame.

I’m having fun. I can because I can. I like it. The food is good and I know what’s in it. The jars look pretty on a shelf and have become that kind of functional beauty decoration folklorists loved to talk about in academic terms, back in Grad School when we couldn’t afford any art anyway.

So maybe I’m a little annoyed when others feel a need to shred the joy, but c’est la vie. Prepper is hardly the worst thing I’ve been called in life, and the political goo that sticks to the term washes off easily in my water bath canner. I just spent a week at the beach with friends who are taking herbal medicine classes to enhance their professions, and they’re getting jeered at for being hippie weirdos. Which amuses them. Herbal medicines are about the most capitalistic thing going in America right now. You have NO IDEA how much a tincture based on herbs picked for free from your grandpa’s acre sells for per ounce. Or how good sea rocket tastes, sauteed in olive oil. Laughing all the way to the bank, they are, with their muscles relaxed from the stuff they know how to make cheap and apply in just the right spot.

If everything, from why french fries are soggy to the reasons people like canned milk, has to be politicized, here’s wishing those who do so what joy they can scrape out of such ungracious social media interaction. It doesn’t look like much joy from here, but live and let live; isn’t that the point.

Can’t we just enjoy life and let others do the same? Sometimes people have hobbies that involve learning new things because they enjoy learning new things. As opposed to, say, sitting around watching TV. Not everything has to have a democratic or republican slant. Sometimes we pick violets because they’re pretty, and sometimes because they make great sauce for ice cream. Vanilla. Which one hears republicans prefer. Whatever. I guess democrats like Cherry Garcia?

Cut it out, y’all. Get real lives. Enjoy something because you enjoy it. Remember joy, contentment, peace? We can still do that. Live and let live.

(Note to friends who may be feeling attacked right now: It’s okay; I know you asked because you care. Other people didn’t and I’m talking to them. Let it go.)