Skip to main content

Lavender and Honey

I write to you while traveling by Via rail from Kitchener to Belleville on my way to a month of "wwoofing" at Millefleurs Lavender and Honey farm.
I spent four hours in Toronto between trains in the sun. People were staying at a distance and walking, biking and running. Praise again to all those who help people travel safely!

I just spent over 5 weeks in isolation at my Mom's camp. I was very good and didn't come within two metres of anyone that whole time. I talked to my mom a couple of times a day on the phone which was an interesting way to visit and kind of fun!
I probably say it too much, but Tilton Lake is beautiful. When I arrived on March 26, the lake was completely frozen and neighbour Rob was on it with his young children "ice fishing" with sticks and strings. This last week, Rob and Sarah were on their paddleboards with passenger-children and Rob and passenger-child went out on their little sailboat. Their enjoyment of the lake from frozen to thawed and the cheerful sounds of their children gave me a great deal of pleasure.


The geese, ducks and loons returned. Man, I love the sound of a loon! Robins sang cheerio cheerio. The stream trickled. I went to Lost Lake quite often and recorded this the day after the ice melted.


Lost Lake

A few years ago, I was walking around Lost Lake and met a man going the other way who was very enthusiastic about a well worn trail around the lake. I explained to him that I came often as a kid and teenager when the trail wasn't so well worn. He told me that he had discovered the lake when he was a teenager (we are peers) and has called it "Hidden Lake". I gently explained that I (and my brothers and the other kids of Tilton Lake) discovered "Lost Lake", so named by our parents. Another discoverer has named it "Little Lake". So the real name is Lost Lake, but technically, on maps, it's called Swan Lake. I love that it is almost untouched and that it is treated with respect by all those who use it (even when they call it by funny names--Swan? Seriously?) and that environmental researchers can study its wonderfulness. When I was a kid, there was a "hermit" that lived on Lost Lake during the summer. His shack is now so disintegrated that you wouldn't know he was ever there unless you knew. His shack ruins are near a really great blueberry patch.

There is a beautiful rock of white quartz along the path that has peachy-pink veins running through it. I am often tempted to take all the manageable-to-carry pieces that break off. Here's a not-quite-small-enough-to-carry piece.

I went around Lost Lake quite a few times during April, watching the snow melt and the ice melt and the ducks taking up residence. I thought about one of my fondest memories of going to Lost Lake with Fraser when he was 9. We had such a nice day together.

File:Tom Thomson Spring 1914.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

Years ago, when I bought some Tom Thomson prints for my livingroom, and Fraser was in university and over for a visit, I asked him if he recognized the painting called "Spring 1914", and he immediately said, "Yeah, it's Lost Lake". I knew that he saw it too! It was actually painted when Tom Thomson was in Algonquin park and not Lost Lake at all!

Tom Thomson is my favourite painter of the Group of Seven-of-which-he-is-not. So many paintings from Algonquin park look like the rugged wilderness around Sudbury which is pristine on Lost Lake. I love his paintings, not because of their accuracy but because of the way they make me feel. He has captured the way I feel about the Northern Ontario wilderness. R. Murray Shafer also captured this feeling in "Princess of the Stars" which I was fortunate enough to hear in early October of my first year of university on Heart Lake near Brampton.

The Case of the Big Bad Mouse

I was yakking on the phone when a mouse scurried by in the kitchen. I'm not good with mice. You know how you've heard that someone thinks mice are rather nice? I'm not her. Although this mouse, being a country mouse, has pretty white undersides and extra big eyes.
I contemplated how a person puts out a trap, and that if it catches a mouse, then the person must then get rid of the dead mouse.
I'm not good with mice.
I became brave however and set the trap. It is a fancy plastic trap.
That night, a giant, noisy mouse (maybe it was a bear or raccoon or sasquatch?) woke me with rattling and crashing. I turned the lights on and investigated the spot where I laid the trap. It wasn't there. It wasn't under the counter, table, fridge or stove. I thought, "Perhaps I've been alone too much and have actually lost my mind. I thought I laid the trap, but perhaps I imagined it?"
The next day, I was determined to find the trap. It was the only way I could prove that I hadn't lost my mind. While I checked every corner, every possible inch of the place, I thought I might as well vacuum. As I went through every corner of the places I thought the mouse could possibly have dragged the trap, I began to lose heart. My mind was probably gone...
That's when my Mom's neighbours Carol and Brian came by. Carol told me that she set a trap and never found it again. She assured me that my mind was intact. My Mom called just then, when I only had one room left--impossible for a mouse to have reached. She told me that there is a spot in the corner of that room where mice sometimes get in and I should check there. I went armed with a flashlight to that very far corner and found the trap, without a hair of mouse in it.
This was war.
I set the trap every night after that and saw the mouse run by most nights without going near the trap. In the end it stopped coming, which you might assume means that I won the war. I think the mouse is still trying to convince me that I've lost my mind, by pretending he never existed.
I guess I'll never know.

Lori
I heard sad news while I was at camp. My dear friend Lori has stage 4 cancer. She has a fight ahead of her with chemo and radiation. With the covid virus, the rest of us can't be with her. Love and prayer are not in self-isolation however and don't need a two metre distance. She will receive plenty of love to support her through this fight.
20 Inspirational Cancer Quotes for Survivors, Fighters...


Tom Thomson paintings
Tom Thomson
"In the Northland", Winter 1915
I said goodbye to the neighbours, Sarah and Rob and their kids, Today I head to beautiful Prince Edward County. I will spend another two weeks in isolation there before I will join the family a little closer. Meanwhile, I am promised plenty of work at Millefleurs farm, being situated on Lake Ontario and smelling of lavender and honey. Sounds like a good place to breathe doesn't it?
As I think about Lori and about the weird and interesting pandemic we are all participating in, I will look for inspiration.
MILLEFLEURS™millefleurs.ca

30 Islamic Inspirational Quotes For Difficult Times
I am also planning to read the entire Quran during this month of Ramadan in imitation of one of my Muslim students. He has been reading the entire Quran since he was nine! He reads it in Arabic--I will read in English, my Arabic being a little rusty!

Comments

  1. Continuing to follow along your lovely journey, Lynne. And my Heart goes out to your dear, dear Friend. I will send blessings, Love and Light her way...In the meanwhile, will keep in touch and look forward to your next beautiful photos from the area I love so much...Prince Edward County, the home of the Sandbanks, where myself and friends spent hours camping in the summers...ahhhh! Stay safe, take care and lots of love from way out west, towards the next run of your adventure! xocathy :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Lynne. Thank you so much for the care packages. We had a honey tasting and the kids favourite was the ginger for taste and the lavender for smell. The plain honey we shared with Nathan and Skye. All were divine. The balm has come in handy as we are washing our hands so much the kids eczema has flared up. The house smells wonderfully of lavender now. Cora had a bee unit assigned by her teachers. I told children you were working on a lavender farm with hives and bees. They were very impressed. Much love from Waterloo.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Kibi (Week Two)

 Our second week was spent at the Kibi Presbyterian College of Education in Kibi--pronounced chibi, and sometimes spelled Kyebi. It was a gorgeous campus in a valley, surrounded by mountains. There was a garden, used by students, and many fruit trees (mango, papaya, banana, coconut), available to students to help themselves to! We had cocoyam for our supper one night. The leaves grow plentifully and Ghanaiansr refer to it as "spinach." cocoyam leaves growing all over the campus The campus had lush plant life, especially hibiscus--they also serve hibiscus drinks which are delicious. Did you know that Ghana (at least in the south of the country where we were) has red soil just like PEI? The pictures of red soil that I took don't look quite red. In real life the soil is a much brighter red. The second week was a replica of the first. Two cohorts from the Volta and Eastern regions. Opening ceremonies, 2 days of 4, 2 hour classes, a closing ceremony and Canada/Ghana night. For...

Kumasi -- Week 1

Sorry for the delay! The wifi in Kibi was limited to non-existent and I am using a Chromebook, needing wifi to type! I am writing about our first week, here at the end of our second week. On Sunday the 7th we headed to the Asanti Region for our first week at the GNAT (Ghana National Association of Teachers) headquarters and site of the new Institute. The Institute will offer graduate courses, teacher training courses and conduct research that will inform government policy. The Institute is brand new so we were here for a very exciting part of GNAT's history. Our days have been long. Two hour sessions four times a day means eight hours of teaching--see how I did the math there? I must be a teacher. The cycle begins with an opening ceremony. Dignitaries are introduced and speeches are made (they are quite long,I fell asleep once), with twenty items on the agenda. The Teacher's Song, the two national anthems and the solidarity song is sung at each opening and closing ceremony with...

Ghana

 Next stop in the adventuresoflynne is Ghana! I am on"Project Overseas," an initiative of the Canadian Teacher's Federation. I applied to ETFO (Elementary Teachers Federation of Ontario) who interviewed me and selected some of us to participate this year. Project Overseas sends Canadian Teachers from across the provinces and territories to 15 countries (in 2024). There were 5 Carribean countries that were on hold, waiting to see if the program would continue after Hurricane Beryl. In the end three of the five went. There are a number of teachers in African countries.  https://www.ctf-fce.ca/what-we-do/international-development-cooperation/project-overseas/ We arrived in Ghana, a bit weary and excited. This shows all 8 of us--Ghana Team 1 and Ghana Team 2.  Team 1: Gwenan from Yellowknife, Clarerose from  Ontario and our leader Lana from PEI. Team 2 has Rachel from Manitoba (leader), Octavia from Nunavut, Meagan from Ontario and Tara from Alberta. We were welcomed by ...