Random Thoughts of a New Mainer
Jeff Kelley and his wife, Donna, recently moved from Boston to a farmhouse in neighboring Chesterville. Follow Kelley's adventures as he adjusts to life in rural Maine.

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October 17, 2008
The Pantry

Autumn is here and the leaves are at their peak of fiery reds and muted yellows. The garden is in the clean-up stage, with beds to be turned and weeds still to be routed out. Nights have been turning colder, with the promise of frosts and snow to come. But we're ready for it as I have been storing away my harvest in a well-stocked pantry.

It's been a long time since I had a garden. When my wife and I lived in Boston, we joined a community garden for a couple of years, but the soil was not great and it would have taken a lot of fertilizer and new soil to get it to produce anything other than a few struggling tomatoes and carrots. The herb plot did well, but I never could figure out why the catnip always looked stunted and half-chewed -- that is until the day I found the neighborhood cat rolling in the middle of it. No, the best I could do was grow a few container plants on a shaded back porch of the apartment where we lived.

Here in Chesterville my garden plot hadn't been used in years, and the soil had been well-rested. Turning the soil in the spring was a challenge, but I borrowed my neighbor's gas-powered tiller and spent hours going around the garden plot until it was ready for planting. My arms ached for days after, but it was worth it.

The garden did better than I ever expected in its first year. Snow peas, green beans, two types of carrots, radishes and lettuce, twelve kinds of tomatoes, butternut and acorn squash, eleven different pepper plants and two types of pumpkins. Not to mention the pleasant surprise of four large rhubarb plants growing behind the barn this past spring. And then there was the unexpected bonus of horseradish growing in clumps in the field surrounding the garden.

With old farmhouses there is almost always a pantry of some kind, and this one is no exception. It's long and narrow, with shelves floor to ceiling; it was one of the features of the house that attracted us last December. When we first moved in we used it for storing our kitchen gadgets and boxes of stuff we'd sort out later. As summer and the garden progressed, it was clear the pantry had to get reorganized. It was time to start preparing for winter.

We didn't do a lot of canning when I was growing up on our farm in the Adirondacks. It was a time when farmers were advised not to grow their own food gardens -- after all, food was cheap enough in the supermarkets and farmers could focus on one cash crop. But I learned the art of canning over the years in Boston and kept small amounts in our small apartment pantry there.

So, over the late summer and early fall this year, we picked and processed beans and peas and bought local corn for the freezer in the shed. Tomatoes took over the enameled counter of our old Hoosier-style cabinet, and what we couldn't eat right away were turned into 'sun-dried' tomatoes (from our dehydrator) and jars of prepared pasta sauce. Store-bought cherries and peaches were turned into jams and peach slices. Rhubarb was canned in early summer in anticipation of pies to come in winter, when the snow starts piling up. Plums from our neighbors' tree were turned into jams of various kinds, as well as large jars of whole plums waiting to be used at a later date. Squash line one section of the shelves and pumpkins are strategically placed on the floor.

So now the pantry is packed with food for the winter. The snow will come, as it always does here in Maine, but we'll be enjoying warm bits of summer every time we walk into the pantry and grab a bag of dried apple slices or a ruby colored jar of jam off the shelf. That makes all the effort of digging and weeding and harvesting worth it.

Posted by Jeff Kelley at 03:26 PM

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Comments

Hi Jeff,

Great post. Sent me back 30 years to my mother's intensive canning efforts of the fruits (and vegetables) of our garden.

Sounds like you are ready for a wonderful winter.

-Keith

Posted by Keith Shangraw
October 17, 2008 09:01 PM

Jeff, it's nice to see that someone from away can embrace what this state is all about. We get our pleasures in the simple things that hard work produces, make due with what we have and appreicate the beauty that surrounds us. Now stop palying on your computer and go stack some wood lol

Posted by
October 18, 2008 12:55 PM

Jeff,

I've been meaning to write and say hi. When we first moved to Maine we lived in your house for 3 years. I've enjoyed reading your blogs and remembering our years on Soper Farm and first experiences in Maine. We are still nearby (Mt. Vernon) and also fortunate enough to be able to telecommute (my husband is a mainframe guy; I have several irons in the fire that allow us to stay)

Anyway, we'll always remember that special little corner of Chesterville. One recollection that might be timely...we had things freeze in the unheated pantry space. Canning jars can make quite an explosion...be careful!

Stop by when you are in MV village (just ask at the store) or stop at Saturday morning coffee at the community center.

Posted by Beth Evans
October 19, 2008 10:00 AM

Jeff, my friend, as warm and toasty your wit and rhyme make me feel, I didn't find anything in your story that hint towards the moral of adjusting (except as a city mouse becoming a country mouse).
Why, what is there truly to adjust with when traveling from one New England state to another?

In 1998 I moved to central Maine from the South (no, not Boston). Texas.
In your story you fail to mention some of the most obvious things that people from out of state must adjust to. This may be because you already adjusted to those things long before in...Boston.

When I first visited Maine I couldn't help but notice how big and puffy the average Mainer is compared to the long tall Texan. One of the strangest things about y'all that I had to get used to was that many of my big and puffy neighbors like to appear in either a tie dye or dead head shirt a size or more larger than even their frame. Ah, and legs covered in sweat pants or baggy plads.
No matter how solemn or pomped the circumstance, the Mainers at the event remain in 1972.
While in Texas, thousands of new energy wind mills are being constructed, I was surprised to see little or nothing in Maine that shows any real interest in energy independence.
The taxes here, the greatest in the nation, appear at first like some amazing environment projects could be funded. But the shadow of this state government's spending darkens any hope that this place could actually lead or at least follow the goals of clean energy that other states seem to already be investing in.
For example, there was a front page article in the KJ warning its readers to vote for an ADDED sales tax on several different items in your super market by voting no on question 1.
Seriously!
Eighteen years in Texas and ten in Maine. In my native Lone Star State I never heard the N bomb used. My school was half white and half black. We HAD to make things work.
Maine was the first place I ever attended all white schools. And these were also the places there the N bomb was dropped around every corner. Is there irony an irony in that or is it, rather, an exposure of a common ignorance concerning the geography of racism.

Maine is beautiful, I love her leaves. Yet, I have noticed vast differences in the people and the state government compared to where I'm from.
One of the greatest challenges I am adjusting to still is one that you could not of noticed from Boston to Maine.
Yankees can be a cold and cranky sort!

Posted by Zacharias Tims
October 20, 2008 04:19 AM

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