This week was all about hunkering down and battening the hatches. In West Tisbury, the hurricane blew over two beehives belong to the Martha's Vineyard Honey Company. Order was restored to the hives the next day.
James Kozak/Martha's Vineyard Honey Company

Surging

<p>I am writing on Monday afternoon still extremely grateful to have power. I cannot begin to imagine life in a city during a major weather event with no electricity. I am fortunate to have a wood stove and a gas range. The bad news for me, however, is having a well, which of course means no water without power. I have jugs and buckets everywhere filled with water.</p>

I am writing on Monday afternoon still extremely grateful to have power. I cannot begin to imagine life in a city during a major weather event with no electricity. I am fortunate to have a wood stove and a gas range. The bad news for me, however, is having a well, which of course means no water without power. I have jugs and buckets everywhere filled with water.

My kids have poked fun at me for years. I saved up a bunch of water after the nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl in the mid-1980s. I was convinced all water would be polluted worldwide. I’ve never claimed sanity in this area.

At any rate, I did a major vegetable picking on Saturday and washed everything in the event of power failure. It was wonderful today to have salad makings at the ready. Too bad I don’t do that regularly.

There is nothing like the threat of a good storm to motivate me. I did quite a bit of winter yard clean up in a record amount of time. I hauled in most of my begonias and geraniums. Hard to believe it’s almost November and we haven’t had a freeze. You have to love Vineyard living, especially in the fall.

I watched my beautiful sugar maple being completely stripped of its leaves today. I do hate a brisk wind in the fall as it brings on the denuded winter landscape much too quickly.

I’m mentally exhausted. I spent too much time this past weekend over-thinking storm preparation. On Saturday evening, I gave myself a much-needed break and went to the Agricultural Hall for soup and music. The event was sponsored by Island Grown Initiative. We are moving forward in planning for a slaughterhouse on-Island. People will be able to raise meat and have it processed here instead of the expensive trip off-Island with animals. Thank you to all involved in this project. As you know, we already have a mobile poultry processing unit. Large animal processing will put us closer to food independence.

Marie and I dug our sweet potatoes. Some were quite large and, boy, were they ever delicious. We decided to attempt propagating our own next year. When ordered as slips from a seed company, they arrive late in the season. I think we can root our own and grow in a hoop house to extend the season. They do require a long growing time.

I’ve misplaced my notes. I like to jot down observations I make all week of the gardening successes of others. This week, my major observation was of boats on trailers. The boating community certainly took storm warnings seriously. I was saddened to hear of the loss at sea of the HMS Bounty. I remember boarding her in the Vineyard Haven Harbor a few years ago. She was a beautiful vessel. I might have to rent Mutiny on the Bounty to see her once more. I wouldn’t mind watching Marlon Brando again either!

The other sad news last week was the death of George McGovern. A decorated war hero, he ran for president on an “end the Vietnam war” platform. He suffered a bad loss, and I must say that awakened me to politics in a whole new way. The realization that I did not think like the majority of Americans was hard to swallow. Joe Biden gave a wonderful speech at the funeral. He spoke in his usual heartfelt way to the children about how great a man was their father.

Oh! One more thing concerning this megastorm. Isn’t it odd that neither presidential candidate has even said the word climate change?

I took a completely subjective poll of friends and kindred spirits: which would you prefer, a hurricane or Mitt Romney? Everyone chose a hurricane. At least it ends in a few days.

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