The Pumpkin Farmer (Encore)
Our story tonight is called The Pumpkin Farmer, and it’s a story about a family tradition and the harvest that comes after a season of careful tending. It’s also about a long table set out beside the barn with every chair taken, a flannel shirt with the sleeves rolled up, and living in step with the seasons.
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Speaker 1 Get more, nothing much happens, with bonus episodes, extra long stories, and ad-free listening, all while supporting the show you love. Subscribe now.
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Speaker 2 These are things people say about drivers who switch their car insurance to Progressive and save hundreds. Visit progressive.com to see if you could save.
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Speaker 1 The holidays can be a lot, can't they?
Speaker 1
For business owners especially, this time of year can go from cozy to chaotic. Fast.
I remember my first holiday rush. I was so worried something would break.
The website, the checkout, my own brain.
Speaker 1
But that's when I learned what a difference the right tools can make. Shopify is the commerce platform behind millions of businesses around the world.
About 10% of all e-commerce in the U.S.
Speaker 1 Whether you're just opening your virtual doors or you're running a full-blown store, Shopify helps you take the holidays from chaos to cha-ching.
Speaker 1 There are thousands of templates and tools to make your site beautiful and functional.
Speaker 1 AI tools to help write product descriptions and headlines, and built-in marketing support so your voice doesn't get lost in the noise.
Speaker 1 Plus, you can relax knowing Shopify's award-winning customer service is there 24-7 if anything comes up. So make this Black Friday one to remember.
Speaker 1 Sign up for your free trial today at shopify.com/slash nothing much.
Speaker 1 That's shopify.com/slash nothing much.
Speaker 1 Welcome to bedtime stories for everyone
Speaker 1 in which
Speaker 1 nothing much happens.
Speaker 1 You feel good.
Speaker 1 And then
Speaker 1 you fall asleep.
Speaker 1 I'm Catherine Nikolai.
Speaker 1 I write and read
Speaker 1 all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens.
Speaker 1 Audio Engineering is by Bob Wittercheim.
Speaker 1 We are bringing you an encore episode tonight, meaning that this story originally aired at some point in the past. It could have been recorded with different equipment in a different location.
Speaker 1 And since I'm a person and not a computer, I sometimes sound just slightly different.
Speaker 1
But the stories are always soothing and family friendly. And our wishes for you are always deep rest and sweet dreams.
Now,
Speaker 1 since every story is someone's first,
Speaker 1 let me say a bit about how to use this podcast.
Speaker 1 I have a simple story to tell you to help you relax and drift off to sleep.
Speaker 1 Not much happens in it, and that's sort of the idea.
Speaker 1 It's a place to rest your mind and anchor to keep your ship in place till morning.
Speaker 1 I'll read the story twice, and I'll go a little bit slower the second time through.
Speaker 1 If you find yourself still awake at the end of the second telling, don't worry. Sometimes that's how it goes.
Speaker 1 Relax. Walk yourself back through whatever bits of the story you can remember.
Speaker 1 Lean into them, and before you know it, you'll be waking up tomorrow, feeling refreshed and calm.
Speaker 1
This is a kind of brain training. Sleep will come more quickly and with more ease as you practice.
So have patience if you're new to this.
Speaker 1 Our story tonight is called The Pumpkin Farmer.
Speaker 1 And it's a story about a family tradition and the harvest that comes comes after a season of careful tending.
Speaker 1 It's also about a long table set out beside the barn with every chair taken, a flannel shirt with the sleeves rolled up,
Speaker 1 and living in step with the seasons.
Speaker 1 Now,
Speaker 1 it's time to settle in.
Speaker 1 Turn off your light.
Speaker 1 Put down all of your devices. You've looked at a screen for the last time today.
Speaker 1 Stretch deep into your sheets and settle yourself into your favorite sleeping position.
Speaker 1 I'll be here guarding over you with my voice while you rest.
Speaker 1 So you can let go.
Speaker 1 It's okay.
Speaker 1 Take a slow breath in through your nose
Speaker 1 and sigh out through your mouth.
Speaker 1 Nice.
Speaker 1 Let's do that again. Breathe in
Speaker 1 and out.
Speaker 1 Good.
Speaker 1 The Pumpkin Farmer
Speaker 1 It could be a hobby
Speaker 1 to grow a garden full of vegetables and flowers.
Speaker 1 It could be a casual pastime,
Speaker 1 something
Speaker 1 you tend to when you can spare a few minutes after dinner and a bit of time on a Saturday morning.
Speaker 1 Maybe the rows aren't straight, and the marigolds get eaten by aphids halfway through the season,
Speaker 1 and you forget to pick the summer squash when they ripen.
Speaker 1 And that's fine.
Speaker 1 The deer will happily eat them. And
Speaker 1 as I say, it can be a hobby.
Speaker 1 But if you are going to grow really excellent, abundant,
Speaker 1 and in particular, large vegetables,
Speaker 1 well,
Speaker 1 it needs to be a passion.
Speaker 1 And for our family,
Speaker 1 it had been just that for a few generations.
Speaker 1 We are known all over the county
Speaker 1 for our mammoth 100-pound cabbages,
Speaker 1 our foot-long colossal carrots,
Speaker 1 and in particular, our beautiful giant pumpkins.
Speaker 1 Learning to grow vegetables like that doesn't happen overnight
Speaker 1 or even in a single season.
Speaker 1 Since my grandparents started tilling the soil, we've been fussily picking out the best seeds to keep
Speaker 1 and perfecting our compost.
Speaker 1 As a kid, I'd walk the rows with them,
Speaker 1 squatting down to press a finger into the soil,
Speaker 1 learning to feel for the right amount of moisture.
Speaker 1 Giant vegetables want quite a good bit of water, too little,
Speaker 1 and they'll languish and split.
Speaker 1 And as they grow, you must thin the rows.
Speaker 1 to keep only the very best plants.
Speaker 1 Pumpkins like a bit of extra potassium and phosphorus.
Speaker 1 So we are careful with what we feed them.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 listen, this is
Speaker 1 my own addition to the recipe.
Speaker 1 They like to be talked to.
Speaker 1 They like to be kept company.
Speaker 1 And the pumpkins might have been feeling a bit lonely lately,
Speaker 1 as most of the rest of the garden had been pulled down and tilled back into the soil.
Speaker 1 We had a good harvest of tomatoes,
Speaker 1 some as big as lopsided bowling balls.
Speaker 1 And we'd had success with a variety of cauliflower
Speaker 1 from seeds we'd traded with our local growing club that had needed three people and a wheelbarrow to get out of the dirt.
Speaker 1 One of our onions had gotten to be nearly three feet long, and my father had carried it lovingly around in his arms like a baby for a whole day.
Speaker 1 I wouldn't be surprised if he'd named it
Speaker 1 Leave it to an onion to make a person weepy.
Speaker 1 So the pumpkin patch was the last bit of growing veg in the garden for the year.
Speaker 1 It was a green and orange island in the large black-brown field.
Speaker 1 We had a week left until the fall fair out by the orchards,
Speaker 1 when our prize veg would be measured and weighed.
Speaker 1 So I spent a fair amount of time with the pumpkins these days.
Speaker 1 We'd had rain the night before,
Speaker 1 and I pulled on my tall yellow rain boots by the back door,
Speaker 1 along with the oversized flannel shirt I wore like a jacket when the air was cool.
Speaker 1 I rolled the sleeves up to my elbows and headed out to the garden.
Speaker 1 The rain had brought down some leaves from the chestnut tree by the barn.
Speaker 1 We'd rake them up later and layer them into the compost pile.
Speaker 1 So much of what grew and lived on this stretch of land
Speaker 1 could be used to help more grow and live.
Speaker 1 When we worked like that with the plants and trees and soil,
Speaker 1 when there were very few things wasted,
Speaker 1 it felt like we were living hand in hand with the land,
Speaker 1 like we were in lockstep with nature,
Speaker 1 Understanding the plan and playing our part in it
Speaker 1 The skies held a few high clouds
Speaker 1 But the day was still bright
Speaker 1 and the cool air felt good on my neck
Speaker 1 I took long strides
Speaker 1 out past the edge of the barn
Speaker 1 and turned toward the pumpkin patch.
Speaker 1 I smiled as I looked down at them.
Speaker 1 There were six,
Speaker 1 spread out over three
Speaker 1 well-spaced rows,
Speaker 1 like the ones in fairy tales, with long green tendrils curling along the soil,
Speaker 1 and pumpkins big enough to possibly carry an excited person in new shoes to a ball
Speaker 1 with a bit of bibbity bobbity boo.
Speaker 1 I spent some time with each one,
Speaker 1 patting them in a friendly way,
Speaker 1 chatting about the rain last night,
Speaker 1 the leaves fallen in the yard,
Speaker 1 the carrot ginger soup I'd smelled simmering in the kitchen on my way out.
Speaker 1 I inspected their leaves,
Speaker 1 checked the soil,
Speaker 1 and ran my hands over their shining, smooth sides to check for splits or soft spots.
Speaker 1 In the end, we'd only take one or two of these to the fair,
Speaker 1 and hopefully we'd add one more blue ribbon to the shelf in the living room.
Speaker 1 People often ask what we do with such enormous vegetables.
Speaker 1 What we do with the pumpkins.
Speaker 1 Well,
Speaker 1 growing this much abundance. naturally means you'll be sharing.
Speaker 1 We had a large family,
Speaker 1 and most Saturday afternoons and evenings turned into a feast for twenty or more.
Speaker 1 We had a long table we carried out of the barn,
Speaker 1 and we'd lay out a cloth
Speaker 1 and start plunking down dish after dish.
Speaker 1 Salads, tomato tarts, ratatouille, zucchini fritters, and coleslaw with shredded cabbage, and matchsticks of carrot and apple.
Speaker 1 And family brought friends, and their friends brought friends as well, and sometimes we'd have to kick folks out of their seats once they'd finished and make space for more.
Speaker 1 Those were my favorite dinners
Speaker 1 when we started to run out of plates and chairs.
Speaker 1 We'd hurry in to wash what we could.
Speaker 1 But I'd also seen people happily eating tomato salad out of coffee mugs with chopsticks while they sat on the grass.
Speaker 1 What we couldn't eat, we gave away.
Speaker 1 We had a makeshift table of saw horses and found planks of wood by the end of the driveway.
Speaker 1 We'd set out spare cucumbers and cabbages. There beside a little sign my cousin had painted saying, Free, take all you need.
Speaker 1 The pumpkins were the only thing we sold.
Speaker 1 The baker insisted.
Speaker 1 They would make all her pumpkin pies for Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1 And years ago, we'd struck up a deal.
Speaker 1 She'd come to the farm and checked them herself.
Speaker 1 And since then, we'd spent the few days after the fair together in the farmhouse's kitchen,
Speaker 1 where, with all hands on deck,
Speaker 1 we'd process and can the bright orange pumpkin flesh
Speaker 1 until every flat surface in the house was holding the newly sealed jars.
Speaker 1 We'd load them into boxes and together haul them to the bakery's pantry where they'd be ready for the November rush.
Speaker 1 I stood up after checking the last pumpkin and brushed the soil from my hands.
Speaker 1 I'd check them again after lunch
Speaker 1 and again before bed.
Speaker 1 I couldn't help it.
Speaker 1 This wasn't a hobby for us.
Speaker 1 This was a passion.
Speaker 1 The pumpkin farmer.
Speaker 1 It could be a hobby
Speaker 1 to grow a garden full of vegetables and flowers.
Speaker 1 It could be a casual pastime,
Speaker 1 something you tend to when you can spare a few minutes after dinner
Speaker 1 and a bit of time on a Saturday morning.
Speaker 1 Maybe the rose aren't straight
Speaker 1 and the marigolds get eaten by aphids halfway through the season.
Speaker 1 And you forget to pick the summer squash when they ripen.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 that's fine.
Speaker 1 The deer will happily eat them.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 as I say,
Speaker 1 it can be a hobby.
Speaker 1 But if you are going to grow
Speaker 1 really excellent,
Speaker 1 abundant,
Speaker 1 and
Speaker 1 in particular, large vegetables,
Speaker 1 well,
Speaker 1 it needs to be a passion.
Speaker 1 And for our family,
Speaker 1 it had been just that
Speaker 1 for a few generations.
Speaker 1 We are known all over the county
Speaker 1 for our mammoth 100 pound cabbages,
Speaker 1 our foot-long colossal carrots,
Speaker 1 and in particular
Speaker 1 our beautiful giant pumpkins.
Speaker 1 Learning to grow vegetables like that
Speaker 1 doesn't happen overnight
Speaker 1 or even in a single season.
Speaker 1 Since my grandparents started tilling the soil,
Speaker 1 we have been fussily picking out the best seeds to keep
Speaker 1 and perfecting our compost.
Speaker 1 As a kid, I'd walk the rows with them,
Speaker 1 squatting down to press a finger into the soil,
Speaker 1 learning to feel for the right amount of moisture.
Speaker 1 Giant vegetables
Speaker 1 want
Speaker 1 quite a good bit of water.
Speaker 1 Too little and they'll languish and split.
Speaker 1 And as they grow,
Speaker 1 you must thin the rows
Speaker 1 to keep only the best plants.
Speaker 1 Pumpkins like a bit of extra potassium and phosphorus.
Speaker 1 So we are careful with what we feed them.
Speaker 1 And listen,
Speaker 1 this
Speaker 1 is my own addition to the recipe.
Speaker 1 They like to be talked to.
Speaker 1 They like to be kept company.
Speaker 1 And the pumpkins might have been feeling a bit lonely lately,
Speaker 1 as most of the rest of the garden
Speaker 1 had been pulled down
Speaker 1 and tilled back into the soil.
Speaker 1 We had a good harvest of tomatoes,
Speaker 1 some as big as lopsided bowling balls.
Speaker 1 And we'd had success with a variety of cauliflower from seeds we'd traded with our local growing club
Speaker 1 that had needed three people and a wheelbarrow to get out of the dirt.
Speaker 1 One of our onions had gotten to be nearly three feet long,
Speaker 1 and my father had carried it lovingly around in his arms like a baby for a whole day.
Speaker 1 I wouldn't be surprised if he'd named it.
Speaker 1 Leave it to an onion
Speaker 1 to make a person weepy.
Speaker 1 So the pumpkin patch was the last bit
Speaker 1 of growing veg in the garden for the year.
Speaker 1 It was a green and orange island in the large black-brown field.
Speaker 1 We had a week left until the fall fair out out by the orchards,
Speaker 1 when our prize veg would be measured and weighed.
Speaker 1 So I spent a fair amount of time with the pumpkins these days.
Speaker 1 We'd had rain the night before,
Speaker 1 and I pulled on my tall yellow rain boots by the back door,
Speaker 1 along with the oversized flannel shirt I wore like a jacket when the air was a bit cool.
Speaker 1 I rolled the sleeves up to my elbows
Speaker 1 and headed out to the garden.
Speaker 1 The rain had brought down some leaves from the chestnut tree by the barn.
Speaker 1 We'd rake them up later and layer them into the compost pile.
Speaker 1 So much of what grew and lived on this stretch of land
Speaker 1 could be used to help more grow and live.
Speaker 1 When we worked like that
Speaker 1 with the plants and trees and soil,
Speaker 1 When there were very few things wasted
Speaker 1 it felt like we were living hand in hand with the land,
Speaker 1 like we were in lockstep with nature,
Speaker 1 understanding the plan and playing our part in it.
Speaker 1 The skies held a few high clouds,
Speaker 1 But the day was still bright,
Speaker 1 and the cool air felt good on my neck.
Speaker 1 I took long strides
Speaker 1 out past the edge of the barn
Speaker 1 and turned toward the pumpkin patch.
Speaker 1 I smiled as I looked out at them.
Speaker 1 There were six,
Speaker 1 spread out over three well spaced rows,
Speaker 1 like the ones in fairy tales,
Speaker 1 with long green tendrils
Speaker 1 curling along the soil,
Speaker 1 and pumpkins big enough
Speaker 1 to possibly carry
Speaker 1 an excited person in new shoes to a ball
Speaker 1 with a bit of bibbity bobbity boo
Speaker 1 I spent some time with each one
Speaker 1 patting them in a friendly way
Speaker 1 chatting about the rain last night
Speaker 1 The leaves fallen in the yard
Speaker 1 The carrot ginger soup I'd smelled simmering in the kitchen on my way out.
Speaker 1 I inspected their leaves,
Speaker 1 checked the soil,
Speaker 1 and ran my hands over their shining, smooth sides
Speaker 1 to check for splits or soft spots.
Speaker 1 In the end,
Speaker 1 we'd only take one or two of these to the fair.
Speaker 1 And hopefully, we'd add one more blue ribbon to the shelf in the living room.
Speaker 1 People often ask what we do with such enormous vegetables,
Speaker 1 what we do with the pumpkins.
Speaker 1 Well, growing this much abundance naturally means you'll be sharing.
Speaker 1 We had a large family
Speaker 1 and most Saturday afternoons and evenings
Speaker 1 turned into a feast for twenty or more.
Speaker 1 We had a long table
Speaker 1 we carried out of the barn,
Speaker 1 and we'd lay out a cloth and start plunking down dish after dish
Speaker 1 salads, tomato tarts,
Speaker 1 ratatouille,
Speaker 1 zucchini fritters and coleslaw with shredded cabbage and matchsticks of carrot and apple.
Speaker 1 And family brought friends, and their friends brought friends as well.
Speaker 1 And sometimes we'd have to kick folks out of their seats once they'd finished and make space for more.
Speaker 1 Those were my favorite dinners
Speaker 1 when we started to run out of plates and chairs.
Speaker 1 We'd hurry in to wash what we could.
Speaker 1 But I'd also seen people happily eating tomato salad out of coffee mugs with chopsticks while they sat on the grass.
Speaker 1 And what we couldn't eat, we gave away.
Speaker 1 We had a makeshift table of saw horses and found planks of wood by the end of the driveway.
Speaker 1 We'd set out spare cucumbers and cabbages.
Speaker 1 There beside a little sign my cousin had painted saying,
Speaker 1 Free.
Speaker 1 Take all you need.
Speaker 1 The pumpkins were the only thing we sold.
Speaker 1 The baker insisted.
Speaker 1 They would make all her pumpkin pies for Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1 And years ago, we'd struck up a deal.
Speaker 1 She'd come to the farm
Speaker 1 and check them herself.
Speaker 1 And since then,
Speaker 1 we'd spent the few days after the fair together in the farmhouse's kitchen,
Speaker 1 where,
Speaker 1 with all hands on deck, we'd process and can
Speaker 1 the bright orange pumpkin flesh
Speaker 1 until every flat surface in the house was holding the newly sealed jars.
Speaker 1 We'd load them into boxes
Speaker 1 and together haul them to the bakery's pantry
Speaker 1 where they'd be ready for the November rush.
Speaker 1 I stood up
Speaker 1 after checking the last pumpkin
Speaker 1 and brushed the soil from my hands.
Speaker 1 I'd check them again after lunch
Speaker 1 and again before bed.
Speaker 1 I couldn't help it.
Speaker 1 This wasn't a hobby for us.
Speaker 1 This was a passion.
Speaker 1 Sweet dreams.