Walk
in the Farmer’s Market any day this summer and you’ll see colour everywhere. Green,
red, yellow, orange and even purple. Walk up and down the outdoor aisles and be
tempted to try many fruits and vegetables, maple syrup and honey. I love going
to the market in summer and it’s where I get my produce for canning.
Favourite market place, so many vendors to choose from |
Already
I have jars marked 2018 dill pickles and pickled beets on the shelf in my cold
room. I still have some jars from last year’s canning, 2017—applesauce, grape jelly,
fruit relish and a limited number of dill pickles. We’ll use those first and
then open the new jars afterwards.
Mom
always taught us that getting the produce as it’s ready and handling it right
away guarantees the best crop for eating while it’s in season and for preserving.
It makes for a busy season when so many offerings are available at one time,
but that’s the way the growing season works. She stayed up late many nights
while we were small children, to get the processing done probably more efficiently
and more easily. It’s a task where you don’t need interruptions. Then as we were old enough, we learned the
tasks to help mom—podding peas, snibbling beans, shucking corn cobs, peeling apples
and more.
Eventually
we learned the process so that one day we could do it ourselves in our own
kitchen. And now I can supply Mom with some of those preserves since she doesn’t
have a garden and doesn’t can anymore. However, I only make those products that I know our family will help us consume. We don't want anything to go to waste.
The beauty of the earth goes beyond the produce growing in season and encompasses all of creation, to the skies, the trees, waterfalls, rainbows and scenes in nature.
We sang the hymn, For the Beauty of the Earth,
in church when I was growing up. Folliott Sandford Pierpoint, the composer,
wrote of creation as a whole:
1
For the beauty of the earth,
for the glory of the skies,
for the love which from our birth
over and around us lies.
for the glory of the skies,
for the love which from our birth
over and around us lies.
Refrain
Christ,
our Lord, to you we raise
this, our hymn of grateful praise.
this, our hymn of grateful praise.
According
to hymnary.org, Pierpoint “was born at Spa Villa, Bath, October 7, 1835, and
educated at Queen's College, Cambridge, graduating in classical honours in
1871.” He wrote of the same earth we know, but in a different time and
location. Other composers and hymn arrangers, such as John
Rutter, have arranged new compositions from this initial hymn that shows up
in more than 500
hymnals.
Pierpoint’s song is in the public domain and has been for more than a century. We may expect to see other musicians present different versions. Having
sung in church and community choirs, I am familiar and rather fond of Rutter’s
artistic arrangements of hymns. Whatever you sing of God’s praise, whether an
original composition or new arrangement, sing joyfully. For in singing, we pray
twice.
3 comments:
I love the abundance that is on offer in my garden at this time of year. Thanks for reminding us who the is the source of all this goodness.
You're welcome, David, and thanks for stopping by and commenting.
Loved it! Although now living in the city, you're evidently still a farm girl at heart. It's great that you have a garden and also ready access to a farmer's market. I've enjoyed a number of trips to the St. Jacob's market. I appreciate David's point, too, about your reminder of the Source. ~~+~~
Post a Comment