The Farmer Boy

It started with an email.

I sent a proposal to one Ms. Sarah Sohn to come intern at Side By Side Farms/CSA in Freeland, MD. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the world of semi-hippie farming establishments, Side By Side is a permaculture farm. They are Certified Naturally Grown and they supply to the cafe that I work at with Miss Williamson. It’s run by a pair of amazing, and sort of crazy women and an increasingly crazy farm manager. The truth is that none of them actually run the farm, it’s run by a little dog named Ruby, who is an absolute slave driver.

 

Ruby

Ruby

When I first arrived on the farm on a chilly, early March morning to talk with Sarah, I wasn’t sure if I was at the right place. There was no sign, there was nothing designating the place as a farm aside from the set of hoop houses that seemed rather barren for a farm. After a few minutes of checking my phone to make sure that the address was correct, I got out of the car and walked up the hill along a gravel truck path towards the upper greenhouse which I later learned was affectionately dubbed the “upper hoop house”. A little while later, I encountered the farm manager, Sarah. She showed me around the farm, told me some of the grander plans she had for the place and then ended the brief “interview” with the question of, “So are you interested in doing this? When can you start working?” I later learned this was because I showed up on time, sober and clothed.

Planting beets with Sarah Sohn (back) and Lisa Augustyniak (front).

Planting beets with Sarah Sohn (back) and Lisa Augustyniak (front).

Sarah Sohn. Weed torcher.

Sarah Sohn. Weed torcher.

A month later, I started my internship with Side By Side Farms. I thought about keeping a proper journal, or perhaps a blog, but I felt like it had already been done. So I opened up my phone and downloaded Instagram in order to keep a photo journal. I already had a fancy Nikon DSLR, but I didn’t want to use it for this. No, if I was going to document an internship at a Certified Naturally Grown, Permaculture/semi-hippie farm, it was going to be with tools that anyone could get.

There’s something about photographing with a DSLR that’s fantastic. You have clarity, you have better quality, you have control and options and precision. I chose to forgo my DSLR for documenting my internship. I wanted it to be approachable, so that every aspect of it could be done by anyone. Almost everyone has smartphones or devices with access to Instagram these days and the majority of them have cameras. There’s something about the idea that everyone is on the same playing field, that everyone has the ability to be a fantastic photographer that appealed to me. I still took photos with my DSLR while I was at the farm, but my journal would only be iPhone photos because it was a quiet message that anyone could do what I was about to do. 

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My first day started around 6 in the morning. By that point in my life, I was already a fairly early riser (by college student standards, 7 in the morning is early), but it was a bit early even for me. The sun was just starting to rise above the trees in my yard and the neighbor’s solar controlled driveway lights were still on. I showered and ate and drove to the farm, the brisk air blowing through the cabin of my green 2004 Toyota Camry. When I got there, the first thing Sarah had on the agenda was covering crops. You see, when it’s cold the plants you’ve just started, the tiny green sprouts, need a bit of help. If it gets too cold then they need to be covered, lest the frost kill them. So off we went, throwing plastic covering over the tops of the plants in long rows to keep the frost off of them and hopefully, preserve them so we could have an early harvest. 

It started at 6.

It started at 6.

Much of the summer went like that. I would wake up early, go to the farm, we would plant seeds or transplant new plants, weed or water, cover and uncover. There was a rhythm to it, a sort of off kilter routine that changed daily. It was fun, it felt like an endless struggle with nature, but one where we could eventually mold the landscape to fit our needs. We didn’t use much machinery, one tractor for tilling and a pickup truck. Everything else we did by hand. It was difficult and laborious, but incredibly rewarding. There were days where I would drink close to two gallons of water and still feel dehydrated towards the end of the day, but if was always worth it in the end. I got a share of the produce, a small amount of money (enough to pay for my petrol over the summer) and always a free lunch made with whatever we had lying around the farm.

The Truck. This was the vehicle I learned to drive stick shift on.

The Truck. This was the vehicle I learned to drive stick shift on.

We did most everything by hand, though there was a tractor. One of the farm residents, Finch created this as a model of the tractor we had. 

We did most everything by hand, though there was a tractor. One of the farm residents, Finch created this as a model of the tractor we had. 

Those were some of the most enjoyable meals I’ve ever created and eaten. They were absolutely delicious and about as fresh as you can get, most of the time having been picked a mere hour before consumption. There were fresh eggs, honey from the bees on the farm and always loads of produce. There were times where there were so many of a particular vegetable that I would be sent home with close to $50 in produce, simply so it didn’t go to waste. Those meals were amazing and I got to cook and consume them with people that, to this day, I believe are the most interesting and enjoyable people I have worked with. I heard stories and met people that, had I not participated in those lunches, I never would have heard. It sounds strange to say, but I met a man while I was working there and I listened to his stories every time he came. The second time I ate lunch with him, I decided that he was the man I wanted to be like when I grew old.

The chicken.  

The chicken.

 

The Donkey

The Donkey

Freshly picked and washed beets.

Freshly picked and washed beets.

What I expected and what actually happened, were completely different things. I expected to come and learn. I expected to learn techniques and the best varieties and how to run an organic, small scale farm. What I learned was that those aren’t the things that matter the most. 

Baby Tatsoi

Baby Tatsoi

I learned that if you want to run a farm, you learn a lot of those things on the fly. I learned that it was relationships that mattered the most. That sitting on the porch of the farmhouse taught me more than hours in the field did (and that’s saying something, because I learned a lot in the field). That hours in the field gave me the best relationship with my local farmer I could ever get. That the relationship with restaurants and your CSA members determine what the best varieties are. That running a “farm” can just be a fancy way of saying you have a profitable, over-sized garden. And I learned that I don’t want to have a farm. I want to have a relationship with my local farmers, one that’s profitable for both of us and for the environment. I want relationships with restaurant owners that support local farmers. I want to support people that care about people. That’s the most important thing my internship taught me.

Though, Sarah, if you’re reading this, yes, I do have a printed copy of that planting schedule in my “garden” folder and Elliot Coleman says, “Hello”

Lettuce. Available as an iPhone cover!

Lettuce. Available as an iPhone cover!

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Greek Choir Music on Repeat

I’ve once or twice thrown around the phrase: “God, I hate people.” But can you imagine actually being afraid of people—like sweating profusely and needing to hide immediately no matter if it’s one person or 100? I mean, in the instances where someone takes too long at the cash register or ATM (because they just have to do one more transaction or just keeps forgetting to ask for a receipt) or someone who keeps mispronouncing your name for the 25th time and even the person talking or listening to obnoxious music too loud on the subway. We’ve all at least thought that we hated people—even if for just that moment. This could all just be a very public display of my pet peeves, but there are individuals who have very real fears regarding people and their capabilities. People with Anthropophobia in extreme cases may withdraw altogether, communicating with others only through letters and electronic media such as email or text messages.

This got me thinking whether individuals with this fear kept a journal or notebook of some sort. If they didn’t necessarily communicate outside of specific written means, does that individual save most of their thoughts for themselves? Could this journal basically serve as his/her words—if spoken aloud, if allowed into conversation? Why not? I can see this notebook being the key to whatever it is they ever wanted to say, a key to building relationships, a key to finally understanding someone who could be scared every other human being on the planet. This could also be my creative and hyperactive imagination running countless laps in my head trying to comprehend someone so different than myself or most other people for that matter. I wonder if individuals with Anthropophobia can write the most beautiful poetry in the world, focusing on intense emotions and observations most people don’t have the courage or energy to see? I wonder if they can create the best fiction stories, devising characters and settings different than those of our typical tropes.

In a sense my questions are stereotypes of these individuals and what they can do; but in another sense, these individuals can bring a great hope for the future of creative writing. I could find their work fascinating as much as I find their lifestyle. I’m not saying that these individuals are common, love to write and would write publicly, but if they did, I would be first in line to read it—if not for the story, but for the fresh voice in writing. To think I only learned about these individuals this morning; My friend mentioned her Uncle who listens to Greek choir music on repeat in order to deal with his fear of other humans. Really, Greek choir music on repeat; I wonder if he writes about it in a journal…

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Humans Of Carlisle 2013-11-08 10:57:20

“What’s one of your favorite childhood memories?”
“Handing bananas and granola bars out of the window of the car with my little sister to my dad while he was training for marathons. We were a pajama clad pit crew.”

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Terry and Opossum Lake

My house is up a long road buried deep within trees, fields, and swamps.  Halloween was always a lonely time as no kids ever braved the long spooky driveway.  With no homes in sight of mine I always believed that the woods were all mine to explore.  Every day I would pick a new direction and spend aimless hours climbing trees, looking under rocks, and occasionally dashing through stranger’s backyards; all in an attempt to get as lost as possible.  Sometime we were not so subtle about our presence on other’s property, however, even after years, I was never once yelled at, or even caught.

With this in mind when my roommate Alec and I saw a large grassy hill overlooking much of the Carlisle countryside, of course we were going to climb it. We knew during another season this hill was strewn with corn stalks, but now there was only clovers, and the occasional bush, nothing for us to ruin.  The views from the top weren’t the best, IMG_1247but seeing the strong winds blow patterns in the grass was fun to see.  I had just finished taking my photos for this blog when a car drove up the driveway adjacent to the hill we were on.  A small figure got out of the car and started waving aggressively at us.  We quickly put on our gloves and gingerly carried our bikes back down the hill trying to avoid anything that looked vaguely like it was intentionally planted.  As we got closer to the car we could see its driver, a big older man with a scraggly beard, and a name tag that read “Terry”.  In his thick Pennsylvanian accent he shouted “The road’s down here!” No shit, I thought, but didn’t say knowing it would only feed Terry’s fury.  After a painful lecture Terry concluded with “and if it happens again, I will arrest you”. Bold claims for a man who could barely fit in his car, but Alec and I were desperate to get out of there.  Grumbling to himself, Terry drove away.

This wasn’t the first time I’d been yelled at for trespassing in Carlisle.  Last year my friends and I built a fire on a private riverbank, only to be seen by the owner, yelled at, but thankfully not arrested.  Exploring the land around you is fun, but sometimes it is even more fun to go where you shouldn’t.  Please don’t use this link to go explore Terry’s hill, but if you do, and if he sees you, tell him you’re from Gettysburg.

Thankfully our bike ride wasn’t spoiled by this encounter.  We kept on going, this time deciding to head west.  A few lucky turns down some small side roads eventually led us to what we thought was a small fishing hole.  We turned onto the small single lane road and saw a small sign “Opossum Lake”.  Over the next hill that small fishing hole suddenly opened up into this.

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Clearly I was a little too shutter happy, but sorry Pennsylvania, this was the first body of water I’ve seen that was really clean, and if it was a little warmer I would have loved to swim in it.  Opossum Lake was artificially made and just recently re-filled in March.  The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission manages the property manages the property and stocks the waters with Bass and Trout.  There are very well kept parking lots, grassy picnic areas, boat landings, and walking trails that circle the 59 acre lake.

I highly recommend biking this loop.  The ride out is pretty hilly, and if there is a headwind it can be grueling, but on the way back you spend a few miles parallel to North Mountain on Enola Road, which has some of the nicest pavement I’ve ever biked on.  With a wind at our backs we were hitting 25 mph nearly the whole way back. The entire trip was

Our “discovery” of Opossum Lake shows just how little of the surrounding communities we know.  Clearly there is much left to explore.

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Thursday Exercise

What 5 things would someone find in your trash can? This can be as literal or figurative as you want it to be.

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The Who, What, Why & How of Permaculture

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It started with two fellows in Tasmania.

Their names were Bill Mollison and David Holmgren. In the 1970s they constructed a new design system for agriculture; in 1978 they published a book called Permaculture One. Permaculture is geared towards going beyond sustainability and creating a closed, holistic system. The term is an amalgam of permanent culture or agriculture, and it’s typically applied to architecture, gardening/farming, ecosystems restoration and building communities. 

(If you want to learn more about the concept of permaculture, we suggest you start here or with this book.)

Permaculture is guided by three ethics and twelve principles. 

We particularly like the way David Holmgren lays them out:

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The ethics include:

Earth Care, People Care and Fair Share.

These three make up the foundation of permaculture. They interlock and overlap, and in the end make permaculture beneficial for everyone. Caring for the earth means caring for the people both in your life and outside of it. If you are caring for the earth – properly caring – then there should be enough to share. Hence, people care once again.

And then there are the principles, the lalapalooza.

When I was first playing with the idea of “permaculture cooking” I started with the principles, trying to apply the concepts involved in cooking to each of them. That’s what we’ve done here with gastronomic permaculture. I’ve also paired the principles with quotes from some of our favorite chefs, foodies, farmers, authors, environmentalists and other people of note.

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You have to observe and interact while cooking, else fingers go missing and things get burned.

But it’s also necessary to keep your eyes peeled while sourcing your food: taking note of what is in season and interacting with local farmers. Once in the kitchen, taste the food (if it’s not meat or fish) before you begin cooking so you know what flavors and textures to pair it with. And take taste tests frequently while cooking. In terms of designing your kitchen, observe yourself in relation to your space. Are the things you use most placed so you can get your paws on them easily? How do you move around your kitchen when is just you cooking? What about when you have company?

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Your kitchen is an ecosystem.

If you catch and store energy when it comes into your kitchen for the first time and/or when it’s in abundance, you will be thankful later, and you will be working towards making a closed system. Catching energy can include composting, grey water usage, biochar (you’ll be hearing more about that in another post), preserving fruits and vegetables, freezing berries and tomatoes, and drying herbs. It can also include utilizing the heat left over from baking, either by opening it to warm your house in the winter, or placing dough in it to rise or yoghurt to incubate. 

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Obviously, when you cook you will probably get something you can eat out of it (unless something goes dastardly wrong).

But there are yields beyond the edible kind. From cooking you can get leftover bits and bob – some of it for compost, some of it that can be reused in the kitchen. You can also forge and foster relations: with farmers, purveyors, cooking partners and dinning companions.

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In the ecosystem of your kitchen/cooking life, you are one small part.

Self regulation may mean not eating foods that are out of season (purchasing avocados around across the country doesn’t do much in the way of earth care) or not eating foods that upset the balance of your body (you’re part of people care too, you know). Therein lies the feedback. When you eat, pay attention to your body. Also when cooking, take into account feedback from your cooking partners and all the potential eaters.

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Maybe this is kind of a no brainer. Lots of us have been told this since grade school.

Use renewable resources whenever possible.  

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Lick the spoon! 

This is one of our favorite principles. For on, it gives are carte blanche to lick the spoon while baking (or when cooking quinoa, or soup, or…). It also means being aware of your “surplus”: what can be used again (for example, vegetable bits can be made into stock) and what can become compost. Also, take into account what kind of packaging the things you buy comes in. Start buying products in bulk, using reusable or brown paper (thus, compostable) bags. However, there will be some waste; it’s the nature of things. So calm down but be proactive.

My two favorite proponents of a “no waste” lifestyle are the No Trash Project and Zero Waste Home

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Find the patterns.

If you like recipes, find ways that they can interlock. Do you make your own yoghurt and granola? Try incubating your yoghurt in your oven after you make granola. Do you roast veggies and make soup? Try using the leftover veggie “scarps” for stock. 

Look for the patterns in your kitchen. In permaculture, we identify zones and organize them in the most efficient way possible. The same idea can be applied to the kitchen. And shopping too. Consider where you travel to get your food; revaluate and find the most effective route.

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A kitchen is not a conveyor belt. 

Integrate people: let them cook with you, even if they’re children, even if they know zilch about cooking. They have tasted buds -that is enough. Even if they refuse to help cook, let them taste what you’re cooking. Go back to principle four: get their feedback.

Integrate ingredients. Use cinnamon in curry, in enchiladas. Try vegetables that are foreign to you – maybe you’ll find that kohlrabi isn’t as scary as it seems (really, it isn’t).

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This will take time. And that’s ok.

A change like this isn’t going to be made overnight. In terms of each of the three ethics, start doing them each a little more and keep adding. If you can’t afford to buy all of your most frequently used goods from earth friendly, people friendly sources start with one. When your blender breaks or you need new knives, consider purchasing more substantial models that will (fingers crossed) last longer. (And also: take care of your knives. That helps too.)

This principle can (and should) be applied to taking care of yourself too.

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Diversity is a good thing.

Diversify where you get your food from: try that health food store on the corner. Diversify what you eat: again, kohlrabi. Or even just a simple ingredient, like nutmeg, that you seldom use. Diversify how you cook: making an entire meal outside is an amazing experience. In sourcing your food there are also other ways of going about getting the goods you cook with. Bartering and foraging might be two viable, yet often overlooked, options. Also, consider redundancy: multiple heating methods and multiple cooling methods (both a freezer and a root cellar).

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Use everything.

Onion peels, sweet potato skins, beet greens, watermelon rind, chard stems, eggshells.

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Sometimes things won’t go the way you plan. It’s not the end of the world.

Burnt things may be able to be reused, and if not, they can be compost. Over-salted foods can create new meals. If you make too many roasted vegetables, don’t throw them out – make curry. (Tamar Adler writes about this beautifully in An Everlasting Meal.) If you have a CSA share or garden, different vegetables will be plentiful at different times of year – you’ve got to roll with it. We also believe that this principles applies to nutrition. Your needs will change throughout the year and throughout your life. 

 

 

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Cup of Latte & Life

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Today I am enjoying a Cafe Latte (a real picture above) at Helena’a Creperie & Cafe in Carlisle, PA. The smooth consistency and creamy foam was just what I needed after a slow week and a tough swim practice. Helena’s is a popular place in town that serves a variety of foods, desserts, crepes, and coffees. I was going to go for the regular cup o’ joe…but I had to splurge. I have actually never had a cafe latte and I am pleasantly surprised! I would absolutely order it again. Feel free to enjoy one with me!

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[This may be a good time to start the music in the left hand column…very fitting song.]

I am 22 years young and as I look back  I realize that I have lived a full and experienced life and really, I have no complaints. I went to middle school, high school, played a sport, made some friends, traveled, am now in college, and now I am looking for a job to continue the rest of my life. The majority of my friends are doing the same, we are all on the “normal” path society has subconsciously laid out for us. Yes, my friends and I have had the “ten year talk” (scary) about what the next ten years hold for us in regard to…everything. All of the sudden ten years doesn’t seem so long and instead of 22 I am 32…and thats only 20 years behind my parents! In the past few weeks I have come across different things that have forced me to stop planning and start doing. To deviate from the normal plan and keep my eyes and heart open to a plan that might come my way. Mom and Dad, I am still looking for a job and attending class, but I want to live and take spontaneous opportunities when they arise. This may mean trying something new every day or spending a large sum of money on a spur of the moment trip, but I am 22…who is to say what I have to do?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jessicajensen/20somethings_b_3989979.html

Don’t feel you have to read this whole article, but I would highly suggest if. For those who don’t wan’t to, I will give a short summary. Jessica Jensen says that she always looked forward to being older and continuously had a life plan with goals to fulfill. She states that when you reach a certain age people start asking about specific things over and over…the “normal” things to do, and all of the sudden life changes. Jensen suggests that you do what you want and not be controlled by our ages. I am sure life is going to go by as fast as this cafe latte is! When I was little I was always looking to my past and certainly my future (usually my future mirrored my cool babysitters’ lives that I had to have). I could list numerous things that I am jumping out of my skin about regarding the future, and then there are days I look back and think, ‘man, I wish I was 5 again running around in my PJs and staying up all night at sleepovers.’ The funny thing is now I am in bed at 9. As I write, there is a little girl running around doing whatever she pleases happy as can be in her polka dot shirt and big bow. Hey, I am 22 but I can do that too! Now, I am not actually going to do that, but what I am trying to say is we should take Jensen’s advice and forget molds and try something that makes you scared and uncomfortable. On a college campus sometimes we tend to do what others are doing and what the campus thinks is “cool”, and certainly some get lost in the mold that a campus can create. As a college student we should be doing the opposite of molding,a and instead we should be letting experiences, people, and ideas shape who we are. We all think of getting older as “calming down” and living with the hobbies, interests, and molds we have created for ourselves at a younger age. For many people, everything after 40 is just “adulthood”. Forget that! Live in the now when you’re young and older. As a senior in college everyone asks what my plan is. My plan is to be 22 today and 23 next year and to not think about when I was 15 or what life will be like when I am 33. At one age I wanted to be 22 and now I am here and am going to live. I have dreams and aspirations but I also have passion and opportunities that I am ready to explore.

For inspiration please watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_81MWUO45wc 

So, it’s a jeep commercial….but for some reason it inspires me (also, now I want a jeep). I have shown different people and gotten mixed reactions, so I am curious to see what others think. It sparked something it me. The commercial reminded me of what we were and how society and the people in it have told us what we can and can not do. As the commercial says, we are still “us” and the horizon lines are still there regardless of what molds we are supposed to fill or what ideas we are supposed to form. Opportunities are still out there regardless of your mold or age. Get uncomfortable.

To fit the “theme” for today’s cup I asked Jenny, the barista at Helena’s Creperie & Cafe, what her piece of advice on life would be. She took a bit of time to think, but replied saying, “I think the number 1 piece of advice I can give is to live compassionately. Remember, we are all in this together. Share a smile, keep your view focused on others as well as yourself, and remember there is something unifying about being human.”

Keep others in mind, take chances, get uncomfortable, live your age and live it to the fullest. Be spontaneous, be excited, and don’t let life pass you by. Make your own mold and fight the “norm”. And for Pete’s sake…try a cafe latte! They’re great.

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Lets Have An Arm Party!

Some people call it arm candy, but I prefer to call it an arm party, as my favorite fashion blog Manrepeller calls it. When I think of arm candy that immediately brings me to those plastic own-made beaded bracelets that seem to be a fad at electric music festivals such as EDC, Swedish House Mafia and so on. An arm party has more of an elegant yet fun and cool name to it. Your arm is having a party with jewelry and each bracelet is a different guest. Usually the jewelry should blend well together so the party doesn’t get awkward and there are no party poopers, because no one likes a party pooper. So really only try to invite guests onto your arm that actually look good together. But then again, I can honestly say that any random piece of jewelry that goes on your arm can look good together.

~Mix real and fake gold together so make a great party~

~Mix real and fake gold together so make a great party~

I’m thinking back to when I was a camper at my sleep away camp in Maine. I entered camp as a scared, shy 9 year old with a naked wrist and came back home after 7 weeks as an outgoing little girl with a full arm filled with silly-bands (throwback) and as many string bracelets as I could fit onto my stubby 9-year-old arms. This was only the beginning to my newfound love for bracelets and accessorizing. Thank you camp for helping me discover how fun an arm party can be. It doesn’t have to be fancy jewelz or even expensive, but if you work it, it works!

~The one and only camp trend circa summer 2013 (loom bracelets)~

~The one and only camp trend circa Summer 2013 (loom bracelets)~

Summer is a time to bring out those brightly colored jewelz and put them all together on your tanned arm. Maybe the theme of the arm party is neon or anything bright. When fall and winter roll around though I prefer to call the theme of the arm party metals. Gold, silver, and bronze do the trick as the weather begins to change from warm summer air to brisk cold air. The leaves begin to fall and it’s suddenly time to put away the neon colors and bring out the hard metals.

Something about metal on the wrist makes me feel so clean and the look is crisp. This might be my OCD coming out but the uniformity of having one shade of color is trendy and will never go out of style. Sure little pops of color in the metal can’t hurt anyone though. But I mean c’mon, gold has been in style since the beginning of time, so I can firmly say, gold and metals aren’t going anywhere.

~Continue the festivities by adding some gold rings to the mix!~

~Continue the festivities by adding some gold rings to the mix too!~

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Follow the Motion

Just something that woke me up this morning…it’s strange, but amazing.

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Greenbuild International Conference and Expo!

Thanks to a generous sponsorship from my college and an alum, I will be attending the Greenbuild International Conference and Expo in Philadelphia on November 20-22! And, I will be live tweeting it all @CityMentality! Greenbuild is the only conference dedicated to sustainable building and development. The conference covers topics including LEED certification, green infrastructure, resiliency, mixed-use development,…

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