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The garden at its peak in July

clockwise from bottom left: eggs from Black Copper Maran, Olive Egger, Ameraucana, Gold Sex Link, and Silver Lace Wyandotte

I posted a tour of Hobbiton Farm in April when the garden was in second gear, all power and acceleration of potential; it was a time of year when I put seedlings in-ground, and the plantings were well underway, past the danger of being eaten whole by slugs and birds, but still very near the beginning of their growth. All was a promise. All was hope. All was a fresh new green.

I’d dare say that July and August are peak garden months. For many, July and August are the best time of year in a foodscape. So much to pick and eat. The leaves are dark green. The tomatoes are bright red and yellow and purple. So much at full ripeness. All the hard work from Winter ensuring soil health and the care we take in planting and nurturing in Spring show up right around now. So in some way, I see it as a time when my mistakes are also highlighted.

This year has been an atypical one, even if every year the garden is different. Some years, the cucumbers do fantastic while the peppers barely have fruit. Other years, the cucumbers don’t fruit at all. This year, the romano beans fruited early and withered by mid-July. I’ve been picking tomatoes since July 4th, right around the time I filmed this tour. I’ve never picked tomatoes this early!

My partner said I ought to give you another tour. So in a pandemic house dress and in full ajumma mode, we recorded the garden in early July. I give you another tour of Hobbiton Farm.


The first clip is of the patio (which right now houses two feral cats adjusting into their new role as barn cats / garden cats). It’s kind of unruly out there! Also, for the first time, it looks like we get to harvest jujube dates!

The biggest difference is that the plants have grown and branched and leafed out. The meadow area, for instance, is replete with cosmos now.

The second clip includes the fruit trees and flower garden portion of the garden. Lots of stone fruit. Lots of netting over the stone fruit, because the squirrels KNOW.

The vegetable garden is unruly, wild, and prolific! This is ALWAYS the part of the garden where my ambition bites me; I get so excited I ALWAYS overplant. LOLz. Here, you see calendula and garlic and asparagus and tomatoes and cucumbers and squash and beans and kalettes SQUISHED together, companion planting be damned. The jeolla-do mustard, at peak in the April video, has long gone to seed.

Oh hello, chickens. Since this was recorded, the flocks integrated. They get along great! And it’s awesome to have them all under one roof. Brad the Rooster won’t leave the younger hens alone; but this way, the ratio is such that he doesn’t pick the hens’ backs bald.

Down at the bottom of the farm are the Tiny House, the hugelkultur bed, and the apiary. I’ll have to give yet another tour soon because since this was filmed in early July, a squirrel gnawed off the head of this mammoth sunflower (which I planted as a salute to Ukraine). Also, I cleaned up the apiary of its old boxes. In sum, things have changed in the last few weeks, even. There’s nothing like watching a video of yourself and the garden to spur you into cleaning up!

There you go.

How Tucker and I are connected in the weirdest way

A number of years ago, my dear friend LH came over to visit for a few days. This was before the pandemic when casual overnight visits were a Normal Thing. At one point, between our usual hilarious exchanges, she mentioned the ghost in the guest room.

Ah, a ghost?

Yes, he said. And went on to explain the appearance of this ghost. She was young, though not a child. White. Agitated but not violent. And, LH added, from a long time ago, probably someone who lived about one hundred years back. Do you know, she asked, who it might be?

No, I did not know who she might be. No, we did not question at all the possibility of a ghost in the house, either. Firstly, because LH is an amazing witch and I believed her. And secondly, because we’d kind of sensed it. That corner of the house has–let’s say–a different kind of vibe. It’s not as sunny. It always feels a little “hollow.” The other people in my household shy away from the room. Because I really LIKE ghosts, I regularly write in that room.

Just a normal breakfast conversation at our house. The conversation segued. The visit went on. Many jokes were told. Good meals were had. Hugs exchanged.

After LH left, I began researching the previous inhabitants of this house, of which in its one hundred-year history, I am the fourth owner. I met the third owners (of course, during the sale). And the neighbors like to talk about the house’s second owners–to such an extent that I feel like I’ve met them, too. The initial owners? That was more of a mystery.

We were handed a parcel of archival paperwork when we moved in. Some of these papers were on very thin vellum, typewritten, yellowed with age, the architect’s notes for the house. I took the brittle pages out from storage and thumbed through them, each page turn crackling like a spark, looking for the client’s name. And there it was: Maurice Ennis.

And thus began a casual research journey; research that happened on impulse throughout the years.

I learned that there were initially three children in this house, a girl and two twin boys, born in the early 1900s. I learned the name of the girl who grew up and attended Bryn Mawr, then returned to Northern California where she got busted for having a speakeasy in her barn and serving alcohol to minors in the 1950s. In some accounts, it was spun as if Carolyn merely threw a kegger for her children. And in others, I could read between the lines describing who it was she served: her eighteen-year-old son, underaged girls, and adult male acquaintances. Questionable. Notorious. That said, at death, she was described as a socialite. For reals, there was a debutante picture of her.

I forwarded a screenshot of Carolyn’s Bryn Mawr picture to LH.

headshot of Carolyn

That’s her! she said.

So the ghost now had a name. But why did she haunt this house in the form of her Bryn Mawr self?

And for years, I didn’t dig further.

We had made peace with the ghost. I wasn’t sure why she was here, only that she was. It seemed like a moot point to question the intentions of a ghost.

But one boring weekend, I thought about Carolyn’s twin brothers, Oliver and David. Who were they? And why didn’t they haunt the house? Why only Carolyn?

A google search told me David grew up to be an attorney and had a son he named after himself. That son, too, became an attorney. The trail ends.

Oliver, the other twin, married three times and managed an insurance brokerage. He had three children. One of his children was a daughter named Lisa.

And Lisa. Married Dick Carlson. And had a son. Named Tucker.

I screamed. Mostly in shock and horror.

Tucker Carlson’s mother and father divorced when he was young. Tucker’s mother, Lisa, abandoned six-year-old Tucker and his little brother Buckley to pursue a “bohemian life” in France, and subsequently created a great mother wound–which is a fancy psychology term that ensconces the trauma from neglectful parenting.

TUCKER CARLSON HAS BEEN REBELLING AGAINST HIS MOTHER ALL THIS TIME, YO.

Dick Carlson (who himself had been abandoned by a mother), was a single parent for several years to Tucker and Buckley. Carlson married a Swanson heiress and then Tucker was sent off to boarding school (like so many stepmoms threaten to do in black comedy but in his case, really happened). Tucker has gone on record that he wants nothing to do with his birth mother (though when his mother Lisa died leaving him $1 in her will, he suddenly did pay attention to her by suing the estate).

Damn, this house is kind of a busy intersection. Of what? A ghost. Past drama. Current drama. Family drama. And TUCKER CARLSON ENERGY. DAMMIT.

Also now I wonder if the woman haunting this house is Tucker Carlson’s mother, Lisa.

Meanwhile, my own ancestry has a much different vector than that of Tucker. My mother was born to wealthy landowners in Pyongyang, before the Korean War. Her family fled to Seoul after the Korean War began when it was clear that they would be persecuted. They went in two groups–the older children walked with my grandfather in the wintertime when the rivers were frozen and walkable. The younger children (my infant mother included), traveled by boat with my grandmother where they were all reunited in Seoul. My mother’s family had a decidedly different life after the war, but they made do. All the children were educated. And my mother, the youngest child, went to Seoul National University where she earned a nursing degree, with plans to study further in the United States.

My father was born in the countryside of what is now South Korea in Chungcheongnam-do. He was never rich. He was the second of five children who survived infancy. His older brother was in the Japanese Resistance; my father’s biggest memory about the end of the War was his brother coming back home after being released from political prison. But not for long; his brother, a well-known socialist and activist, defected to North Korea. And so my father’s family was persecuted under the dictatorship of Park Chung-hee. My father kept his head low, graduating with a very practical and not-political-at-all engineering degree from Seoul National University so as not to attract the attention of the KCIA, with the intention of continuing his studies in the United States. And the added benefit of avoiding KCIA surveillance.

Then my dad got a glimpse of my mom’s older sister. And asked her on a date. That sister, my third auntie, demurred and instead introduced him to my mother. Three months later, they were married. My mom to this day says, “If I had known what a leftist your dad was at the time, I would never have married him!”

They moved to New York City. Gave up on their studies after a few years and started a family instead. Had two children.

Yada yada yada I eventually came to live in Berkeley. Married a man of Israeli descent I met in college. Bought this house.

When I first stepped into the place I now call home, I knew it had never known anyone like me. I was certainly the first BIPOC in the neighborhood. It took five years for the neighbors to say hello to me. I’d been so hazed by my prior neighborhood that I didn’t mind the cold shoulder; I preferred it to the active complaints and bullying I’d experienced for three straight years.

Before leaving, LH told me a little about how to improve relationships with ghosts. The ghost, said my friend, needed to be acknowledged. My daughter and I addressed Carolyn, left flowers in the room, beautified the surroundings. Carolyn calmed. In my research too, I’ve been acknowledging the history of this house. It is a long-delayed meet-and-greet. And I hope it will in return, accept me. (That is a life theme for me for sure).

I thought, mistakenly, that I would be met with silence by an inanimate object. My partner who came to live with me a number of years ago has always said this house is never silent. It’s constantly creaking and sighing, he told me. This is, he said, an ACTIVE house.

Every time I throw out a question, I get an answer. It just isn’t the answer to the question I ask.

Where I’ll be at AWP 2017


Friday
February 11, 2017 // Washington, DC

Beyond the Hospital: The Memoirist on Writing About Health, Illness, and Injury
Monument, Marriott Marquis, Meeting Level Four
Friday, February 10, 2017
4:30pm-5:45pm


Friday
February 11, 2017 // Washington, DC

In Praise of Junot Díaz and Claudia Rankine: Furthering the MFA vs. POC and AWP 2016 Keynote Conversations
Room 207A, Washington Convention Center, Level Two
Friday, February 10, 2017
10:30am-11:45am

And at the hotel bar + book fair!

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