Author Archives: maryjane

women farmers worldwide

Our fingers, dark with soil, press seeds and pluck fruits.

Our shoulders feel the heat of the sun.

Come tomorrow’s sunrise, our muscles will ache with work done diligently.

And we will begin again.

You see,

no matter where in the world you may be,

we’re not so different,

you and me.

So, to celebrate common ground across the globe,

let’s have a little female farmer geography bee, MaryJane style (all fun, no foul).

What do you say?

It’s easy—just scroll through the photos below and try to guess each farmgal’s geographic location.

Jot down your answers as you go, and check them at the bottom of this post. I’ll provide a map link within each answer so that you can investigate (plan a visit?) if you wish.

Photo by Kate Holt/AusAID, Africa Food Security 17, via Wikimedia Commons

Photo courtesy of Florida Memory via Wikimedia Commons

Photo by David Baldi (user PandaDB) via Wikimedia Commons

Photo by Meena Kadri via Wikimedia Commons

Photo by Swathi Sridharan (ICRISAT) via Wikimedia Commons

Photo by Leonardo Aguiar via Wikimedia Commons

Answers:

  1. Cape Town, South Africa (map)
  2. Terra Ceia, Florida (map)
  3. Viscri, Romania (map)
  4. Puducherry, India (map)
  5. Mwanza District, Malawi (map)
  6. Sao Paulo, Brazil (map)

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garden book

You just came in from the garden.

Maybe it started to drizzle, or

(woe of woes)

there just isn’t anything left to DO right now …

Sprouts are sprouting, knee-high to a toad.

Photo by jonsson from Göteborg, Sweden via Wikimedia Commons

Weeds (well, only the two) have been pulled.

Trellises dutifully await the dangling green weight of pole beans.

Photo by mark_dixon4 via Pixabay.com

Sigh …

Now what?

What do you do with these …

Photo by Daniel Sone via Wikimedia Commons

until it’s time to fill them with these?

Photo by Robert & Mihaela Vicol via Wikimedia Commons

I have just the thing.

It’s a … well, it’s a … ummm … okay, okay …

It’s a book.

“A booooook?!” you exclaim. “No matter how much I love reading, this is not the time. I want to GARDEN.”

Hush now, my dear. I feel your impatience—really, I do. (I am in Idaho, remember, where spring can be oh-so-slow to settle in.)

That’s why, when I say “book,” I mean something special—not just any book, but a voluptuous volume that has the power to tide you over until your first harvest and may actually beckon you back when your baskets are bursting.

This book is called Growing Beautiful Food, and it’s filled with mouth-watering photos (not to mention succulent text) by Matthew Benson, contributing editor and television spokesman for Rodale’s Organic Gardening.

Much to this impatient gardener’s delight, Mr. Benson created a video (set to a sweetly soothing soundtrack), designed to hook garden-giddy gals like you and me. Watch and dream …

 

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Say what?

Mispronounced words?

Where? (aka, Who me?)

You might be surprised.

To-MAH-to, po-TAH-to.

Don’t you wanna know?

Seriously, though …

There’s quite a queue of words that we’re likely to mispronounce on any given day.

(A sandwich spread or a prodigal poet—you might mispronounce and not even know it.)

Persnickety, you say?

Perhaps.

Chinchilla_cat_(5833713404)

Photo by allen watkin via Wikimedia Commons

Although you should know that it’s technically pernickety.

Well, it is.

Anyway, if you want to feel just a little bit smarter than you did when you woke up this morning, here’s an easy means to that end:

Affluent

Don’t say: a-FLU-ent

Do say: AFF-lu-ent


Either (Neither)?

Well, just watch:


Mayonnaise

Don’t say: mannaize

Do say: MAY-o-naize

 

Miniature

Don’t say: minichur

Do say: miniachur (yup – the short “a” sound should be heard)

 

Potable

Don’t say: pottable

Do say: potable (long “o” is the way to go)

 

Prestigious

Don’t say: pre-STEE-jus

Do say: pre-STI-jus (short “i”)

 

Respite

Don’t say: respite (rhymes with despite)

Do say: respit

 

Seuss (as in, the good doctor of children’s literature)

Theodore Geisel, aka Dr. Seuss, adopted his pen name from his German mother’s maiden name, which was properly pronounced in the native tongue as “Soice” (rhymes with voice). But, the American inclination to say “Soose” stuck, and Geisel gave in, realizing that it was potentially profitable to rhyme with another famous name in children’s lit—Mother Goose.


Silicone

Don’t say: silicone

Do say: silicon

 

The (nope, not kidding)

Technically speaking, there are some instances when one should say “thuh” and others when this word’s pronunciation should be “thee.” According to Grammar Girl Mignon Fogarty, pronunciation of “the” depends on how you pronounce the word that follows it. If the following word begins with a consonant sound, you say “thuh” (as in, “thuh” farmhouse). But if the following word starts with a vowel sound, you say “thee” (as in, “thee” egg).

Thee egg and me, prestigious. Pass the mayo please.

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Hear Ye!

Welcome New Sisters! (click for current roster)

Merit Badge Awardees (click for latest awards)

My featured Merit Badge Awardee of the Week is … Joanna Green!!!

Joanna Green (Joanna, #5965) has received a certificate of achievement in Stitching & Crafting for earning a Beginner Level Buttoned Up Merit Badge!

“I have had buttons laying around and stuffed in many places for awhile, but I thought it was time to gather them all together in one place. Some of them are from my great-aunt, some from my mom, and some I have collected on my own.

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I counted a total of 95 buttons and hope to add more. I decided to make a box to put them in and had a lot of fun doing it! I just covered a cardboard box with fabric and added some details.”

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