"I eat dirt," she said out of the blue. I wasn't sure what she meant at the time, and waved off the statement in favor of a more tangible course of conversation. But when she invited me out to watch a sawmill in action, I was inducted into the practice of tasting soil for it's composition and texture.
While she isn't a geophagist , although she admits to spooning red clay down her gullet in the past, when she was anemic, and still harbors a predilection for crunchy New York shale, Shelby looks for the aspects a good soil needs for gardening: clay, to supply good drainage, silt, which is rich in organic matter, and sand, which aids in drainage and heat retention. In my Master Gardener class they taught us to look for these elements by massaging the soil in our hands. Oh, but it's so much more fun to taste it!
Last Fall my friends Bill and Shelby invited me out to their farm to learn how to kill and gut chickens. Oddly enough I was elated at the idea of learning a skill I never in a million years would need to know. And I may not.
I had just finished reading all of Michael Pollan's books and The Omnivore's Dilemma was particularly fresh in my mind. The book chronicles Pollan's journey to discover exactly where his food comes from, including an in-depth look at corn, tracking steer number 534 and its unnatural diet of corn, and a stint with Joel Salatin on his uber-organic, fully sustainable, days-of-yore pastoral farm. It was the Joel Salatin experience I was after.
Unlike Pollan I did not feel queasy during or after the experience. I found it liberating to know exactly where my dinner was coming from and that I, not some far away, indifferent line worker, slaughtered and cleaned the animal. These chickens were raised naturally, and the distance from live bird to what looked like a store-bought chicken that I recognized (only cleaner and better smelling) was not that far.
We recorded three hours of footage that day, but I like this short tutorial of Bill explaining a chicken's stomach. The quality is a bit crude, but so were the day's events.
Flying Right Fly Fishing 101 in The Shoals.
Shoals Magazine, summer 2009
Eat Well, Buy Local A look at locally raised, organically grown produce in the Shoals. August 2008, Shoals Woman Magazine.
Singing The Blues A blues primer in celebration of Handy Fest 2008, a 10-day festival celebrating the birth of W.C. Handy, father of the blues.
Summer 2008, Shoals Woman
The Problem With Zinfandel Why some states, like Alabama, can not freely buy and sell America's premier California wines.
Fall 2008, Shoals Magazine