In the tradition of Michael Pollan, Joan Gussow, and Verlyn Klinkenborg's The Rural Life, This Common Ground is an inspirational evocation of a life lived close to the earth, written by the head farmer at one of the country's first community-supported farms. By reflecting on four seasons of activity at his beloved Quail Hill Farm in eastern Long Island, Scott Chaskey offers stirring insight into the connections between land and the human family. Whether writing about the voice of a small wren nesting in the lemon balm or a meadow of oats, millet, and peas rising to silver and green after a fresh rain, this poet-farmer's contagious sense of wonder brings us back to our bond with the soil.
So there I was, shopping for cough drops and all-fruit popsicles, when I saw the stand of books near the check-out at QFC. What better way to beat the sick-at-home, stuck-on-the-couch blues than by curling up with a new book? And, possessing a new dream of living on a farm someday, I saw fit to make that new book This Common Ground. I'll let you know how it goes...
If you are any kind of green-thumbed person, this is for you. For ME, the serial plant killer, no.
I thought it would be more memoir than gardening guide. He does write quite beautifully, as the book jacket blurb quotes, 'I have learned to cultivate crops and poetic meter.'
My favorite part of the book was the first page of the introduction. Particularly this first bit; 'In a peninsular place the clarity of light is partly what lures the love of land and water. I have gardened and farmed on the Land's End peninsula of Cornwall and on the South Fork of Long Island, where the light, especially in spring and autumn, transforms the landscape. Soil, stem, branch, leaf, and fruit reflect the sea, and the farmer or gardener contemplates beauty and utility in one thought. I have learned to cultivate crops and poetic meter, and I admire the exercise of art, but wild nature is parent to each. Despite consistent schedules and plantings and cultivations, the fields I labor in continually yearn to return to a kind of natural chaos.'
A very pleasant book about the seasons on one of the founding farms of the CSA movement in the US. Was very valuable in connecting me to other thinkers, letting me in on what to expect of the seasons at my own work, and some individual insights about crops and ways to view the work that goes into organic farming. That said, Chaskey's Romantic streak and conflation of his farm in New York and his past in the UK made it a little bit to wide eyed and blustery for me to stay engaged the whole time.
wow. this was such an amazing read. it felt very familiar as he was talking about the seasons on the farm and the rhythm of daily work on a csa farm. i also felt like i was learning so much about new varieties of plants or farming techniques and just loved his writing style. so poetic and poignant. i hope to come back to this book when i am an even more seasoned farmer and am excited to see how i might read it differently then :)
A gorgeously-written homage to the land, the soil, and the hope of a new reciprocal stewardship of our shared earth. I already plan on re-reading this one.
The opposite of "Harvest", a really beautiful look at organic farming. The author talks wistfully about his time farming in Cornwall, England, and shares his poetry (and the poetry of others). Embraced the beauty of nature and how everything in our world works together to support each other. Loved learned and reading about his farming experiences. Wonderful descriptions that created a lovely image of his farms in my mind.
This book caught my eye because it was about organic farming, something that I know nothing about but have a desperate desire to do, in a small way, in a container on my back porch. This book was more about being outside in nature, feeding people off the land, planting garlic but since the author is more often a poet, it had quite the poetic feel.
I like Chaskey's style. It never surprises me when farmers are also articulate. I wish I fell into the same group. I even learned a few things about planting garlic. I liked that chapter in particular.
I enjoyed this book, but don't know that everyone would; discusses community-supported agriculture & standards for organic farming; author thinks Green Arrow peas are the sweetest (mentions Lincoln, but not, I think, Wando and Telephone)
I love the story and life of this farmer. I liked his poetry and prose too. Really great to see someone living a good story. The book itself is no masterpiece, but the man's life is simply good.
I thought this was a lovely book. It combines the love of gardening (on a CSA scale) with poetry and birdwatching. A pleasant way to spend the afternoon.
I made it 3/4 through the book and couldn't read anymore. It is well-written, but I was not in the essay mood anymore. Beautiful descriptions of everything I did read, though.
It took me awhile to read but it really wasn't that hard to get through, I mostly wanted to enjoy it slowly. The author writes so well and describes the seasons beautifully.
If you are a person with a poetic mind and like Henry David Thoreau's Walden or Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, you will probably like this book.
quite the wordsmith, he paints beautiful images and sensations of the moments that bring us to presence on the farm. a nice reflection on a year of a well established CSA.