Simplicity
Blueberries and Cabbage Rolls
Early in Mick's bicycling forays, simplicity moved from concept to concrete reality. Spending long chunks of time each day in what is best known as drive-by and fly-over country, a bicyclist certainly has a few simple tasks to perform: going from A to B during the day; don't get lost; eat and hydrate enough; safety first; and find the best spot for the inconvenient bladder and bowel movements when facilities are not available. However, the most compelling simplicities come from those who live in those areas dear to them, but off the radar screen of the world.
To the north of the more industrious Thunder Bay, Canada on Lake Superior is the small town of Nipigon. In 2003, while raising funds for Habitat for Humanity affiliates around Lake Superior, Mick and his ride companion, Scott, rode along the Trans-Canadian highway deeper into bush country as the Canadians call it. They had the rock solid experience of a very typical Amethyst Rock Shop. Gas stations were few and far between, and the Esso Station was typical as well with its small diner. But the food they really feasted on that day was in the form of a talkative and humorous waitress named Maria. She was of Finnish origin and on her first day of work. If the bush is the respected king of all that is north of Lake Superior, then blueberries are its delightful queen. Eight miles short of Nipigon, Scott thankfully convinced Mick to stop again for a simple pleasure; fresh, as in from scratch, blueberry pie and ice cream.
One gets the impression that a reality show called “Nipigon Gone Wild” will never occur as you enter this traditional type of town; Nipigon had its glory days around 1800 with the Hudson Day Fur Company. Mick and Scott stayed with Steve and Kathy, and their energetic daughter Colleen, who undoubtedly became a drama student in school. Steve likes to customize and detail cars, and by the beauty he had in the front yard and from his conversation, it would seem it takes a very very long time to accomplish. It is not because of lack of skill or time, but simply - why hurry?
The family lives in the first home
built outside the original fort compound by the Hudson Fur Company as a boarding house. Kathy and Steve were slowly, yes - slowly, trying to renovate it into a bed and breakfast. For instance, the “insulation” in the thick walls is the original mixture of twigs, leaves, and birch bark. Their home was indeed homey, as in simply cluttered. Steve did many odd jobs besides renovating old cars; Kathy provided child care out of the home. A very simple lifestyle compared to most; it sure fit in well with the “out in the bush” look of Nipigon.
Habits and traditions honed through the generations seemed common in bush country. To their urban-lived surprise, Scott and Mick had arrived in the midst of the whole family engaged in the yearly making of the traditional Ukrainian cabbage rolls, which when frozen, would last throughout the entire winter. A cabbage roll is a mixture of meat, spices, and of course cabbage; Mick and Scott enjoyed the traditional meal with the family that evening. Kathy was nice enough to share the recipe with them; Mick tried it a couple months later on his family with less than favorable results.
That same evening, a severe thunderstorm came through, and oops - Mick and Scott had left their bikes outside for the first and only time of the trip. Fatigue takes over pretty quickly after a long day on the road, so the storm simply had no effect on them as they both dozed off quickly and slept through nature's sound and light show. The morning was a bit brighter, and after checking out and drying off their wet bikes, they enjoyed a family breakfast of, what else, pancakes and fresh blueberry sauce made from Steve's blueberry picking in the bush. It should not have surprised them that along with the family's simple lifestyle, Steve had enough time to be crowned that year, the local blueberry King; an annual competition won by the person who picks the most pounds/kilograms of blueberries over an allotted three-day time span in the bush.
Questions
1. How would you characterize living the simpler life?
2. Did you gravitate first to thinking in material terms? Does it seem to mean a boring life as well to you?
3. Would the culture you live in characterize a life of simplicity as a success? Why or why not?
4. What other attributes, besides living a less materially driven life, can you envision as part of a life of simplicity?
5. How simple (or not) do you find trying to live a simpler life to be?
6. Who in your life or experience exemplifies living a life of simplicity?