Farmer Weenie discusses plants and dirt. She’s even sexier in person…
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Farmer Weenie discusses plants and dirt. She’s even sexier in person…
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The term “passion” is one of those trendy words that’s been rubbing me the wrong way lately. It’s now practically expected that we feel passion for our work. Really? So I’m supposed to feel ashamed if I don’t leap out of bed each morning before the sun like some twisted Disney character who sings of brochures and annual reports while woodland creatures help me dress and start up the computer? Really? Books tell me I should find my passion and do that for a living, which begs the question: How do I get paid to sit on the couch and eat ice cream sandwiches?
In my opinion the field of graphic design has virtually nothing to do with passion—unless one’s passion involves agonizing over the space between two letters and whether a sans serif typeface can appropriately carry the weight of the subject matter— in which case we have a much larger issue at hand. To say I have a passion for graphic design is like saying I have a passion for breathing or for my heart beating. I won’t go so far as to say it’s necessary for my survival, but it’s become a nearly involuntary action. I simply can’t help myself.
I cannot drive down the street without being assaulted by design just waiting to be critiqued and improved. Unless I were to vacation on a log in the middle of the ocean, I wouldn’t be able to escape it, and even then I imagine I’d eventually see a plastic grocery bag float by with some sorry-ass logo just begging to be redesigned. I can’t even open a pack of M&Ms without making a groovy design that in turn influences the order in which I eat them. This is not a passion. This is a sickness.
If you have a passion for something, good grief, don’t do it for a living. I’m not saying you shouldn’t enjoy or even love what you do for your livelihood, but save your passion for the baseball diamond, family vacations or an ice cream sandwich. Believe me, you do not want squirrels and birds in charge of starting up your computer. They cannot be trusted.
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In a shocking turn of events, things have started growing at Farmer Weenie’s homestead. Panicking, she heads to the bible of gardening, Wikipedia, to find out what to do next. All that does is confuse the Weenie even more, so she reaches out to her secret weapon in the great white north.
Dear friend and fellow farmer Kirsten Bartel owns Seed and Bean Garden Design in Edmonton, Canada, where they have things like snow and health insurance. Hopes are high that she will put down her shovel or knitting or delicious pot of soup she’s cooking (overachiever much?) to answer this question…
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If you are having trouble viewing this fascinating video, click here to watch it on YouTube.
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So I decided to become a farmer the other day. Never mind the fact that the closest I’ve come to farming is the science project I’ve got going on in my refrigerator. I have that dangerous combination of determination, passion and ignorance often found in trailblazers like myself (and borderline personalities).
Determined to start this farming lifestyle as soon as possible, I headed over to the home improvement store to gather supplies. A nice young man in an orange apron approached, at which point I became the worst part of his day. A mere two and a half hours later, I was on my way home with a pile of items ill-suited to an uncoordinated graphic designer with a distaste for manual labor and sunlight.
Once home, I changed into a cute farming outfit, filled up my water bottle and headed outside. The plan was to build a wooden square, put dirt in it and wait for the bounty. While the plan took a bit of a detour that involved some flailing about and a near leg-gouging, the result was just as I’d expected—Mr. Weenie built the box for me, hauled it out of the shed and lugged giant bags of soil and compost (which, as it turns out, is actually made of poo) to the backyard.
After it became apparent that Mr. Weenie wouldn’t be joining me for the great sod bust of 2010, I grabbed a rusty old shovel (the gardening tool, not the spouse) and got to work. As torrents of sweat cascaded down my neck, back and legs into my cute little farming socks, I began to question my plan. After all, there was a Whole Foods just minutes down the road, and aside from slight queasiness at paying seven dollars for a head of lettuce, there would be little physical discomfort involved.
Considering my SAT math scores, it was no surprise that my soil estimates were a tad off. Apparently one must multiply to get square footage, not subtract. After another trip to Home Depot I proceeded to dump 1.5 square feet of dirt directly into my left shoe. (Note to self: Must get new farming socks.) Bags two and three were uneventful, but the peat moss I borrowed from my neighbor held a magical surprise in the form of a roach infestation.
While I don’t believe roaches are living creatures, but rather denizens of hell that must be eradicated, I just didn’t have the stomach (or enough feet) to squish the mass of unholy filth pouring forth from the bag of peat moss. In a nauseating flashback to the time I left half an order of fried cheese sticks out on the desk of my freshman dorm room overnight, I was left with only one option: Scream like a 4-year-old girl, do freakish terror-jig in my box of dirt, madly attempt to flip disgusting roaches out of dirt box with rake while instead flipping self over side of box and into tree stump.
I don't believe in seeds at all---they must be fake, they're way too small. If I grow something in this box, I'll buy myself new garden sox.
After a bit of “tilling” (I made little decorations in the dirt with my nifty rake), I was ready to plant some veggies. Have I mentioned that I don’t really like vegetables? I find them pretentious, and they take too long to chew. However, since I don’t eat meat that lives on land and has legs, I find my diet to be awfully limiting when I cut out all vegetables. If only they could get broccoli to taste like bacon. (Mmmm…bacon…why must you live on land and have feet??)
So back to planting. I bought seeds as well as sprouted plants since I don’t really believe in seeds. The idea that burying tiny grains of organic matter will result in roasted beets on a bed of Swiss chard is kind of like believing in the existence of Santa Claus or Retirement.
I guess I got a little excited in the gardening department, because I wound up with 27 sprouted plants plus seeds for spinach, chard, beets, radishes, carrots, sugar snap peas, parsley, three types of lettuce and some sort of alien squash I’ve never seen before. As I looked at my sad little 4′x4′ garden, I had visions of the Stonehenge scene from the movie, This is Spinal Tap, where a computational error in drawing up plans for a famous rock band’s giant set-piece results in a bunch of leprechauns dancing around an 18-inch version of the iconic English monument. Farming, it turns out, is hard. And it involves math.
Undaunted, I bravely moved on to the sowing of the seeds. Step 1: Carefully read instructions on outside of seed packets to determine planting depth, spacing, water/sun requirements, etc. Step 2: Ignore instructions. Instead, dig holes, dump seeds into holes, stir seeds around with finger, make nifty little plant label stakes, forget where and what you planted, randomly stick labels into dirt wherever you think you might have planted something, admire cute gardening hat, eat ice cream sandwich.
While I may be a seed atheist, I do believe in seedlings that I buy from a nursery. Therefore, they received the prime spot on the farm–right in the center. In hindsight, it might have been a little easier to plant the center of the box before the perimeter, but with such low expectations, it hardly mattered. As I stood watering my green babies that evening, I felt a disturbing, yet not entirely unpleasant sensation around the zipper of my pants. Turns out the hose had sprung a leak, and I was standing right over it—a fitting end to a challenging day.
I awoke the next morning unable to move—pain shooting down my neck, shoulders and hamstrings. I used the momentum of my one working limb to flip over and into a position where I could hang my legs off the side of the bed, slide to the floor, wriggle over to the wall and into a standing position. Piece of cake. (until I had to put on shoes)
An hour later, shoes firmly attached, I went out to survey the land. Apparently farming is one of those delayed gratification activities, but two days later I couldn’t believe my eyes—some of the seeds had sprouted! They were next to a sign that said “radish,” so they might have been radishes! They also could’ve been carrots or weeds, but at least they were alive. It was official—I was a Farmer! Time to update my Linkedin profile.
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WORK EXPERIENCE
1990 – 2010: Graphic Designer
Last Friday afternoon – present: Farmer
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