tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4173612660935544309.post7790156065433667608..comments2023-06-29T04:34:30.054-04:00Comments on <center>Elrond Hubbard</center>: We Take Time Out for this Important Service AnnouncementElrond Hubbardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11723771523336254820noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4173612660935544309.post-74470019133318592302007-06-12T13:58:00.000-04:002007-06-12T13:58:00.000-04:00I read this when I got up this morning and couldn'...I read this when I got up this morning and couldn't yet comment because I needed to digest!<BR/><BR/>First comment: I pink puffy heart farmers and conservationists -- sustainable agriculture, baby!<BR/><BR/>I love the land. I make new land by using yard waste, and I am thankful to the land for giving me some green beans to eat today, and some cucumbers and summer squash to eat in the next few days. I love the smell of dirt, of leaves, of water, of rain, of pine straw, of the heat... :::sigh:::<BR/><BR/>So thanks for helping with that PSA. It made me happy. <BR/><BR/>Comment the second: I am both jealous of and saddened by your description of the migrant worker camps.<BR/><BR/>I value having the opportunity to see how others live, be they the rural Mayan family I stayed with in the late 1990s or the Vanderbilts at the Biltmore. Both are really compelling to me. I've not had the opportunity to go to a migrant worker camp, so reading your vivid description is second best to going. Thank you!!<BR/><BR/>What deplorable sounding conditions, though...Stewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08035180908524589885noreply@blogger.com