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Prescription for Adventure

~ by Naomi Gaede Penner

Prescription for Adventure

Monthly Archives: April 2023

Garden Tales

28 Friday Apr 2023

Posted by Naomi Gaede Penner in Everyday life, Uncategorized

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(Adapted from my “Prescription for Adventure” column in the

April/May 2023 Kansas Country Register.)

Kansas

The flat wagon jolted along the dirt road as it returned from the cornfield. I was a preschooler, surrounded by my sister, mother, grandmother, aunt and uncle, and cousin. The sun beat down on my face, and my heart was warmed by feeling a part of something bigger than myself – a family group and a farming heritage.  Occasionally, a caterpillar squirmed out of a husk and frightened me. Soon after we arrived at the farmhouse, the women-folk sharpened their knives and cut the kernels off the cobs to package and freeze. I stood back, too young to help, yet fascinated.

            My mother had grown up with edible crops in the field, along with a garden by the stock tank that yielded thumb-sized potatoes fried in butter, tomatoes, string beans, and peas cooked in white sauce, heavy with black pepper.

            Thick memories. Deep happiness.

Tanana, Alaska

When my Kansas mama left the farm for Interior Alaska, she carried farming in her fingers. Along the Yukon River, she planted leaf lettuce, peas, green beans, carrots, and onions. The Native people stood back and watched her plant tomatoes.

            “They won’t get ripe,” the villagers whispered.

            The twenty-four-hour midnight sun was warm and sent the nourishment of light onto the plants. The vegetables grew quickly. She pulled the lettuce and added canned milk, a bit of sugar, and sliced boiled eggs.  Then she gathered other produce as well; but, by early August, frost touched the garden and the tomatoes were still green. They found a place on the windowsill.  My mother encouraged them to turn red. They tried. But it wasn’t Kansas.

Arizona

In February, I spent time in Arizona with a longtime friend. She took me to her garden at the community plot. plot. A garden? In winter?

            “I think in reverse here,” she explained. “Instead of quilting in the winter, I quilt during the summer heat, and in winter, I dig and plant outside.

            When we returned to her house, laden with rewards of her hard work, she instructed me, “Chop this …”

After donning an apron—one her grandmother had made – I chopped and chopped:  red and white Swiss chard, kale, green onions, carrots, snap peas, parsley, spinach, beet tops, broccoli, and green cauliflower.  This assortment was tossed into a skillet and turned into a delicious Italian stir-fry.

            Backward gardening. Summer. Winter. The rewards were the same.

Wisconsin

So, growing up in Wisconsin, did you have a garden?” I asked this same friend.

“Oh yes, we had so much abundance: leaf lettuce, peas, beans, onions, tomatoes, corn, and more,” she told me. “And we froze vegetables, canned beet pickles and watermelon pickles. Then, we had strawberries, along with wild raspberries, and we found blueberries where there had been a forest fire years before – and we had to watch out for snakes because of swampy land, and can you believe the town of Blueberry was nearby?”

That made such a lovely picture in my mind.

Soldotna, Alaska – Gaede-80 Homestead

My mother carried her farming skills everywhere she went. When our family moved to Soldotna, Alaska, and proved up an 80 acre homestead, my mother was quick to dig into the sandy soil and once again plant cool weather vegetables. One cabbage could make gallons of her South Russia Mennonite heritage’s cabbage-tomato borscht!

Colorado

Even though I go “home” often, my primary residence is on the prairie land of Colorado. Sunflowers grow easily and abundantly. I’ve given up vegetable gardening. Drought, wind, deer, rabbits, and hard soil thwart my efforts.  I’ve resigned myself to hardy, persistent, colorful snapdragons and Hobby Lobby fake flowers. Sometimes, we have to do what we have to do. Sometimes, I forget and water the fake flowers, too.

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Dr. Elmer and Ruby’s Missionary Trip to Russian Mission, Alaska

01 Saturday Apr 2023

Posted by Naomi Gaede Penner in Alaska - Tanana, The Bush Doctor's Wife

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(Adapted excerpts from Naomi Gaede Penner’s “The Bush Doctor’s Wife.”

Up in the Air

Tanana, 1959

Elmer Gaede offered his wife Ruby a new opportunity. For her, it would be an opportunity to visit missionaries. For him, it would be an adventure to fly a great distance down the Yukon River. The tone of Ruby’s letter to her parents was excited, even though it involved flying — with Elmer, which frightened her, given his non-stop stories of emergency landings.

April 9 “It was beautiful weather this month so we flew as a family to Russian Mission, downriver, about 400 miles, to visit with the Mennonite lay missionaries Stolfus and family and Eddie Hooley the school teacher. It was a 3 day trip. Russian Mission is an eskimo village of about 120 people. It isn’t very far from the ocean.

Ruby and Elmer had met Mahlon and Hilda Stoltzfus when they had come down the Yukon River, in a small outboard-motor boat with their three children. Elmer considered them great trailblazers and an inspiration to everyone. He couldn’t wait to see their endeavors. Ruby saw a need to encourage another missionary woman in an isolated Alaska village.

Ruby rolled up her sleeves for food preparation to take to the missionaries; among those things were butterscotch chip cookies and round raisin bread. She hated to use up the missionaries’ meager food supply by her own family’s eating, so added a box of oatmeal and powdered milk for her family’s breakfast.  Elmer was a stickler on weight-and-balance in the plane, and she knew she couldn’t take much.

The village, approximately 450 air miles downriver from Tanana, was located where a fur trading post of the Russian-American Company had been established in 1842. Russian Orthodox missionaries built a log chapel shortly after that time. Following the sale of Alaska, from the Russians to the United States, in 1867, the village was called Russian Mission.

Naomi (9) and Ruth (7) snuggled into army mummy bags in the backseat of their fathers’ Piper PA-14. Mark (3) was sandwiched between his mother and the front seat instrument panel, beside his daddy, and within full view of how flying took place. “I can help Daddy,” he said with a grin. “We can fly the plane…let’s go, Daddy!”

We followed the Yukon river in general but made a few short cuts where the river curved off coarse Even though it was clear we didn’t see Russian Mission until we were right over it since it was hidden behind a hill and kind of tucked into a canyon that opened down to the river. The Stolfuses and half the eskimos in the village met us when we landed on the frozen river by the village.

Foot traffic had worn down single-track snow trails throughout the village, and the procession followed in a line to the Stoltzfus’s rough-hewn two-story house, which backed into a steep hill.  Snowbanks pushed up to the windowsills.

The Stolfuses own the village store which is combined with their living quarters. They treated us royally and were so happy to visit with fellow Believer and Mennonites. We also visited with the Mennonite school teacher Eddie Hooley.

The school was a sturdy building with four-side logs and corrugated tin roof. A dark-green lean-to served as Eddie’s living quarters, as well as a kind of arctic entry. A tall flagpole in front could be seen from most of the village.

The fellowship was all very wonderful and we were sorry to have to say farewell. By 9:00 AM we were again airborne and starting home. It was again clear and warm (18 degrees)   We were glad to arrive home by dusk after having an unusual beautiful, smooth, and safe trip. We had flown about 10 hours covering over 900 miles.

Ruby had had no complaints about flying – to see the missionaries.

Authors’ Notes: I thought I’d found all the newspaper clippings about my parents, which my Gaede grandmother had saved, and which were returned to my parents, and which I unearthed in my parent’s filing cabinet after they died. HOWEVER, below is a treasure I discovered two weeks ago!

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