Lizs Book Snuggery
nationalfarmersday

Celebrate October 12, National Farmers Day, with a Classic Picture Book Read….and Perhaps a Trip to a Local Farm?

A Prayer in Spring

Robert Frost and Grandma Moses

I wrote this homage to classic picture books some years ago, but I wanted to re-post it today which happens to be National Farmers Day!

The day resonates most especially for our family because farming happens to fall in our new wheel house. It is our Chapter Two in life, and we feel honored to be putting our hands in the dirt of this ancient and sometimes taken for granted commitment. And it is a commitment. Nature is your silent partner and sometimes Mother Nature is not so silent. but she is always able to be generous.

It’s a life born from new beginnings and ever hopeful that seeds planted, will yield an abundant harvest during the summer and fall.

As i read Newsweek’s take on National Farmers Day, it had a few suggestions on how to celebrate.

But first some farming facts:

 

According to Business Insider, farming contributed 132.8 billion in the U.S. economy in 2017.

 

One U.S. farm feeds 166 people annually, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF)

 

Family farms or ranches of sold agricultural products (also according to the AFBF)

 

You may ask… why buy from farmers?

Well, according to Newsweek, you are:

 

Enjoying fresh products

 

Supporting the local economy

 

Helping the environment – the products haven’t traveled very far and probably are using a lot less plastic, which in turn, aids the climate crisis.

 

Here are some things to buy that support farmers:

Eggs

Milk

Honey

Jams and jellies

Fruit

Vegetables

Cheese

Flowers

Grains

Organic soaps

 

 

Here is my re-post for a classic picture book read. It was written in the spring, and is set in spring, so you’ll have to use your imaginations which I’m sure are wonderful!

 

There are plenty of prayers going skyward from farmers and growers of all types as spring, and the growing season, are off to a slow start. Mother Nature packed quite a wallop this winter; then add on Punxsutawney Phil’s prognostication of six more weeks of winter on February 2nd, and spring planting is in a holding pattern.

Yet, when I spied this picture book, I felt lighter. The words of Robert Frost’s springtime celebration poetry, coupled with Anna Mary Robertson aka Grandma Moses and her sublime scenes of spring, bid you to spur your young reader to get out and revel in the beauty that is awakening from long winter slumbers.

I believe in acquainting young readers with classic picture book reads. That is not to say these books are the sole sanctuaries in picture book reading of what is meaningful and important to children, but they are very special for a reason. And that great leveler is time; and that is why great picture book art and narrative can still, years after its publication, continue to speak to a child’s heart.

And here, in “A Prayer in Spring” two very American masters of art and poetry combine to bring the newness of spring from their quite original perspectives.

In Frost’s evocative poem of springtime sights, sounds and scenery, Grandma Moses matches his words with her very identifiable technique in a depiction of the flowers, foliage, bees, and rolling countryside that mimics Mother Earth’s slow reawakening.

I love these next few lines because they expressly capture the look of apple orchard blossoms at bud break that I have marveled at in our own orchard. It’s a creamy white haze of petals, amassed in row upon row, that all seems to meld together:

 

   “Oh, give us pleasure in the orchard white, Like nothing else by day, like ghosts at night;”

 

And the book’s lines of poetry and art even seem to speak to the farmer’s nervousness; as nothing about planting is ever guaranteed:

 

 “Oh, give us pleasure in the flowers to-day;

And give us not to think so far away

As the uncertain harvest; keep us here

All simply in the springing of the year.”

 

In a world of 24/7 news cycles, where families scramble to fulfill work and play obligations that are still more scheduled than ever, why not take some timeout with two titans? Robert Frost and Grandma Moses will have you and your child immersed during a picture book spring sit-down, poring over pages of art bursting with green newness and renewal of possibilities.

It’s very catching, because this picture book has spurred me on to take a walk in the apple orchard and see the blossoms – now!

Well, maybe not right now, as Mother Nature has perhaps just one more surprise under her bonnet in the way of another storm. But, right after that surprise comes a reprise of all the sights and smells of earth renewing itself.

So, take a young reader by the hand and revel in the earthy newness soon to arrive right around the corner, and abounding within the pages of this essential classic picture book.

New life – new earth – new beginnings – all found with the turn of a page!

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