• Farm Life,  Home & Garden,  Lifestyle

    Cottagecore 101: An Introduction for Monterey Farmgirl

    Recently, a friend of mine asked if she and her photographer could scope out my farm for a photo shoot for her business based in Carmel-by-the-Sea. “Sure thing!” I replied, although adding that the wildflowers here are a bit deflated this year due to lack of rain. “It’s going to be a cottagecore theme!” she said. At this point I admit I was a bit befuddled. What the heck is cottagecore?, I thought. I completely forgot about this word until she and the photographer arrived at my farm. The photographer and my friend starting discussing that word again–cottagecore. It still sounded very ambiguous to me. I went online to see if any of the local libraries carried books on cottagecore. Nope. It was time to get down to business. I had to know.

    Mrs. Frizzle and our colorful eggs on the farm.

    According to Good Housekeeping, it is a “dreamy aesthetic taking over the internet”. Okay, still ambiguous. The article goes on to say that cottagecore “embraces the charm of the English countryside, creating an idealized representation of farm life – no matter where in the world you may live.” Hmmmm. Examples of this include tending a garden, sipping tea, and foraging for mushrooms to recreate a “pastoral fantasy”. At this point, I am thinking, “My God, I am cottagecore!” But am I? Am I unwittingly part of a trend? The answer is no. I am just living my own ding dang life with my animals on the farm, I love nature, and that is authentically who I am. No trendy Wendy here.

    The Mushroom Forager’s Festival I attended in Big Sur.

    Blogger Sara McDaniel calls cottagecore “Narnia combined with Little House on the Prairie…a charmed, fantastical, dreamy way of life absent of modern stresses and combined with sustainable living”.

    Wild lupines growing on my farm in 2020.

    Cottagecore is also referred to as farmcore and countrycore. Huffington Post states that it is returning to “our roots”, which they define as staying home, going green, wearing flowery dresses, writing letters, baking bread, embroidering, and everything DIY. It also stipulates that to be cottagecore, you should look and live “like you’re in some sort of pastoral painting”. But I do! I do!

    My dancing goat, Yoda.

    I discovered that someone has indeed written a book on this topic. The Little Book of Cottagecore, by Emily Kent, has yet to be found anywhere locally. I am certain that since it is an internet sensation it is readily available online, should someone want to delve further into this. And it’s not just any old book, but a little book which sounds much cozier, does it not?

    Monterey Farmgirl in her flowery dress in a pastoral setting on her farm in 2020.
    Monterey Farmgirl wearing a flowery dress in a pastoral setting on her farm in 2020.

    In the meantime, I am going to return to my granny square crocheting and think about making hand-dipped soy candles while the aroma of homemade banana bread wafts from my oven. Damn it, I am cottagecore.

    Thank you for visiting my blog. You may also enjoy reading Prettiest Wildflowers in Monterey County, From A-Z and Greatest Inspirational Goat Quotes Ever! Wishing you peace, love, happiness, and beautiful vistas!

  • Farm Life

    Life in the Country

    “It’s your road and yours alone. Others may walk it with you, but no one can walk it for you.”  This quote compelled me to write about my life on a dirt road in the California countryside.

    When you live in the country on a dirt road you will never have a clean car.  You will wash it to no avail, as the thick clouds of dust created when you drive on the road will quickly cover your vehicle in a fine gray layer.  The dust will waft from the road into your house each time you open a window or door, so that your house can never be kept clean either, no matter how much you dust and sweep.  

    When you live in the country on a dirt road, you will dread the heavy rains, because you know it will mean a dance with death as you navigate your vehicle along the long slippery stretch hoping you don’t slide into the cliff wall, or worse yet, skid over the other side that plunges seventy-five feet below.  

    When you live in the country on a dirt road, you learn to watch for sinkholes in the road that start as big around as a man’s arm and suddenly become large enough to swallow your car.  You will pass dozens of black cattle peppering the hillside and filling the silence with their gentle mooing. Sometimes one will squeeze through the fence and you will spot it trotting nonchalantly along the road until the ranch hands catch it and return it to the fenced in pasture.

    When you live in the country on a dirt road, sometimes you will see a roadrunner darting quickly across or a tarantula crawling slowly along.  You will learn the difference between rattlesnakes and bull snakes and learn to set the good black and white striped king snakes free when they become trapped in your garden’s protective netting.  You will learn to recognize the ubiquitous poison oak and to avoid touching it lest you break out in the familiar horrible, itchy rash.  

    When you live in the country on a dirt road you will find that you can’t leave your chickens out past supper time or the Bobcats will get them.  You will watch a team of wild pigs running fast near the creek in the quiet dusky evenings. You will hear a pack of coyotes howling just over the hill.  You will lie on your back in the night and see every distant star in the galaxy and make a wish on one.  You will see the Milky Way floating distantly like an ethereal plate and think about how tiny and inconspicuous you really are.  

    When you live in the country on a dirt road, it is almost two miles to your mailbox, but if you walk to it, you have time to notice the wildflowers: purple lupines, orange sticky monkey flowers, pink shooting stars.  You will smell the fresh scent of eucalyptus after the rain.  You will see blue jays, magpies and doves sitting on fence posts, quail scuttling along the road, and hawks and vultures swooping and circling rhythmically in the air.  And sometimes you will see the hoof prints of deer, and then those of a mountain lion, and then both sets of prints will disappear.  

    When you live in the country on a dirt road, you wave at everyone you see walking by, and you smile because people are friendly and so are you.  Sometimes you stop to chat with a neighbor who lives further down the road.  And sometimes you see people you have hiked with in the past, and they will invite you to share a bottle of wine.  

    When you live in the country on a dirt road, life is good and it is simple.  And sometimes, that is all you need.

  • Farm Life

    Farm Life in the Monterey Countryside in June

    It’s life on the farm as usual.  A bluebelly lizard is performing push-ups on the woodpile.  He looks at me as if to assess my reaction.  My goats, Anushka and Aliyah, are grazing nearby, chewing dead leaves and nibbling the moss on the fence posts.  Harold, the rooster, stands nearby, and at times dances over to me, shaking his tail feathers.  We have a love/hate relationship, Harold and I.  He is either attacking me or flirting with me.  He lives with Anushka and Aliyah in the little goat house and I believe he thinks he is a goat.   Anushka and Aliyah love to eat, and unfortunately, are starting to eat their goat house just as Hansel & Gretel ate their gingerbread house in the fairy tale. Wildflowers are starting to bloom:  pink shooting stars, deep purple lupines, and wild yellow jonquils are scattered over the hillside.  Baby quails totter after their parents, who seem to cry out “Be careful! Be careful!”  Hopefully, your weekend is filled with much peacefulness and happiness!