Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep - Summer Harvest (Encore)
Episode Date: August 28, 2025Originally aired as Episode 3 of Season 4, August 26, 2019 Our story tonight is called Summer Harvest, and it’s a story about the result of a season’s worth of hard work and planning. It’s also... about telling time like a farmer would, a red popsicle eaten under a maple tree, and rows of canned tomatoes neatly lined up in the pantry. Subscribe to our Premium channel. The first month is on us. 💙 NMH merch, autographed books and more! Listen to our Bedtime Story Show, Nothing Much Happens First This, Kathryn’s guided mediation podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Bedtime Stories for Everyone, in which Nothing Much Happens.
You feel good, and then you fall asleep.
I'm Catherine Nikolai.
I write and read all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens.
Audio Engineering is by Bob Wittersheim.
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.
And since I'm a person and not a computer, I sometimes sound just slightly different.
But the stories are always soothing and family-friendly.
And our wishes for you are always deep rest and sweet dreams.
Has this ever happened to you?
You're in bed, reading your book.
and maybe even scrunched up in a not-so-comfortable position,
but you can't keep your eyes open.
Then you turn off the light, get as snug as possible,
and suddenly you can't sleep.
What happened in those few seconds
is that the narrative of the story
was replaced by your thinking mind.
So that's how this works.
I'll provide a story, simple, relaxing,
and told twice, with the second reading a little slower than the first.
Let your mind just follow along,
as your eyes would have moved across the page.
And before you know it, you'll be in deep, restful sleep.
If you wake in the middle of the night, rather than letting your brain take over,
think back through any of the story that you remember.
And you'll drop right back off.
Now it's time to get comfortable.
Switch off your light.
Snuggle your body down into the sheets.
And feel how good.
but it is to be in bed.
Let's take a deep breath in through the nose.
And out through the mouth.
Good.
Once more, breathe in.
Sigh out.
Our story tonight is called Summer Harvest,
and it's a story about the result of a season's worth of hard work and planning.
It's also about telling time, like a farmer would,
a red popsicle eaten under a maple tree,
and rows of canned tomatoes, neatly lined up in the pantry.
summer harvest.
We'd gotten here early today
to take advantage of the cool morning air.
The sun was just coming over the trees,
and the dew was still thick in the grass.
We were old hands by now.
We knew how to weed, when to water,
and mostly when to water, and mostly when to.
the harvest.
We'd had a few missteps along the way.
Those potatoes had been tricky, as predicted.
But we'd managed to get a small crop of new potatoes,
and left some in the ground to grow bigger for the fall.
I'd been too timid to cut the broccoli,
unsure if it was ready,
and came one day to find that the beautiful,
florets, had bloomed into even more beautiful yellow flowers.
Oh well, we were learning. Today we were here to harvest. There would still be much more to come,
but the plot was producing so quickly that we'd had to come up for a plan for all that we'd grown.
We'd brought giant wicker baskets to fill with pounds and pounds of tomatoes.
I had a laundry basket lined with an old blanket for the cabbages and cucumbers and zucchini.
The runner beans and green beans are mostly finished by now,
but we'd left a row of the runners to dry on the vine for winter soups.
Those wouldn't be harvested until almost all their leaves had dried and turned brown.
When I walked past them, I thought to myself that they would be ready about when the potatoes were.
I liked thinking in these terms, instead of Tuesday or Wednesday, instead of 1.30 or 6 o'clock.
I timed things by when the potatoes would be harvested, and the beans would be cut down and shelled.
we started in the tomato plants
the tangy smell of the vines rubbing off on our hands
as we carefully picked the fruit
we had romas for sauce
huge lopsided heirloom tomatoes for slicing and salads
giant beefsteaks that would go in canning jars today
and about a million tiny, crispy cherry and grape tomatoes
that burst with an acidic snap in your mouth.
We took a few that were yet unripe for fried green tomato sandwiches,
and some that had fallen heavy and with split skins to the garden floor.
We didn't mind their bruises.
We set the baskets under a tree,
The day was getting hotter
And as we stopped for a rest
And a cool drink
The family with the allotment next to ours arrived
Their two boys ran to greet us
We were old friends by now
They told us
One talking over the other
In a quick galloping rush of words
About summer camp
and their new backpacks for school
and that their neighbor had a pool
do we know them?
We don't.
And later they're going swimming
and did we want popsicles
because mom brought popsicles?
We didn't,
but as my friend headed back to the rose to work,
I sat for a few minutes at the picnic table
under a big maple
when the youngest boy came back,
popsicle in hand,
and awkwardly climbed up onto my lap.
He sat, swinging his feet,
and contentedly staring into the distance
while he ate and dripped his treat
onto my dusty work clothes.
I rested my chin on his head
and hummed a little.
When he was done, he handed me
the red stained stick and rushed back to play in the dirt again with his brother.
Back to work then, I said, and joined my friend in the rows of zucchini.
There were so many zucchini, that we were a bit overwhelmed.
I'd been grilling it, sauteing it, and baking it into muffins and bread.
I'd shredded zucchini on my box grater and sauteed it with olive oil and garlic and tossed it with pasta.
I'd given it to neighbors until they'd refused anymore.
I remembered an old joke, something my uncle used to say,
that if you left your car unlocked in a parking lot this time of year,
you'd come back to find it filled with zucchini.
We weren't the only growers with an overabundance.
And luckily we'd found a food pantry, happy to take all that we wanted to give.
They'd even set out bins at the entrance to the gardens,
and we'd be leaving an awful lot of zucchini there today.
We packed the fruits of our labor into our cars, and shook hands,
silly and content at the successful completion of the plans we'd made
back when the snow was still on the ground.
We'd done it. We were farmers now.
From here we headed back to my place to canned tomatoes until we dropped.
I'd been reading up on it and had the counters lined with clean new jars
and my pressure canter on the stove.
There was a lot to do, but before anything else, we needed to eat.
I laid out a plate of sliced cucumbers with sea salt sprinkled over them.
I'd boiled some of those new potatoes the day before,
and cut them into chunks, and drizzled them with olive oil and rosemary and salt.
I'd set them out on the counter with a table.
towel draped over the bowl before leaving the house that morning, so they'd be room temperature
when we were ready to eat.
I pulled the towel off the bowl, and the smell of rosemary hit me.
Then I rinsed and halved a mess of those tiny red and orange grape tomatoes.
I drizzled olive oil over them and ripped basil leaves into the bowl.
I added salt and a few garlic cloves,
which I'd peeled and just cut in half.
They were there for flavor, not for eating.
Then I handed the bowl to my friend
and dug out my tomato salad stirring spoon
from the back of the drawer.
It was old from my grandmother's kitchen.
It had a long handle and was plenty big and deep.
I told my friend to stir
without stopping for five minutes.
She raised an eyebrow, but set to work.
You can't be hasty with some things.
Some things take a long time to cook or combine or ripen or grow,
and all you can do is be patient.
I turned the broiler on and cut a half dozen thick slices of bread
I laid them out on a sheet pan
and brushed them with more olive oil
and pushed them in.
She stirred.
I watched the toasting bread.
Brousquetta is meant to be well toasted
so that when you top it with the juicy tomato salad
it stays crisp.
I waited for golden brown
and just a little char around the edges and took them out.
She dutifully kept to her work with a spoon,
while I plated up the bread and poured us glasses of tea.
Okay, I said, and she brought the bowl over to add to the rest of the feast.
The tomatoes had given some of their juice to the oil,
and the fruit was glossy,
and fragrant.
We piled it onto the warm toasts,
picking out the garlic and crunching away with the satisfaction
that comes from eating food you've grown yourself.
We made our way through the potatoes and cucumbers.
And when she sat back with a sigh,
I filled her tea glass and broke the last cookie in the jar in half to share.
We looked around the kitchen.
taking in the baskets of tomatoes, the rows of jars, and all the work yet to do, but we didn't mind.
We'd turn on some music, tidy up the dishes and start.
We'd chat, or work in comfortable quiet, as we'd cored and scored the fruit.
We'd blanch and shock it to take off the skin.
then stew them and sterilize the jars.
Finally, the jars would go into the canner,
and as they came out,
we would set them top down on towels till they cooled.
We'd split them up,
and set them neatly on our pantry shelves
for soups and sauces in the winter.
We were farmers,
and now canners are.
as well.
Summer Harvest.
We'd gotten here early today
to take advantage of the cool morning air.
The sun was just coming over the trees,
and the dew was still thick in the grass.
We were old hands by now.
We knew how to weed, when to water,
and mostly when to harvest.
We'd had a few missteps along the way.
Those potatoes had been tricky as predicted.
But we'd managed to get
a small crop of new potatoes, and left some in the ground to grow bigger for the fall.
I'd been too timid to cut the broccoli, unsure if it was ready,
and came one day to find that the beautiful green florets had bloomed into even more beautiful
yellow flowers.
Oh well, we were learning.
Today we were here to harvest.
There would still be much more to come,
but the plot was producing so quickly
that we'd had to come up with a plan for all we'd grown.
We'd brought giant wicker baskets to fill with pounds and pounds of tomatoes.
I had a laundry basket lined with an old blanket for the cabbages and cucumbers and zucchini.
The runner beans and green beans were mostly finished by now,
but we'd left a row of the runners to dry on the vine for winter soups.
Those wouldn't be harvested until almost all their leaves had dried and turned brown.
When I walked past them, I thought to myself, but they would be ready about when the potatoes were.
I liked thinking in those terms.
instead of Tuesday or Wednesday
instead of 1.30 or 6 o'clock.
I timed things by when the potatoes would be harvested
and the beans would be cut down and shelled.
We started in the tomato plants,
the tangy smell of the vines,
rubbing off on our hands as we carefully picked the fruit.
We had romas for sauce.
Huge lopsided heirloom tomatoes for slicing and salads.
Giant beefsteaks that would go in canning jars today.
And about a million tiny, crispy, cherry and grape tomatoes
that burst with an acidic snap in your mouth.
We took a few that were yet unripe for fried green tomato sandwiches,
and some that had fallen heavy and with split skins to the garden floor.
We didn't mind their bruises.
We set the baskets under a tree.
The day was getting hotter.
and as we stopped for a rest and a cool drink,
the family with the allotment next to ours arrived.
Their two boys ran to greet us.
We were old friends by now.
They told us, one talking over the other,
in a quick galloping rush of words
about summer camp
and their new backpacks for school
and that their neighbor had a pool
do we know them?
We don't.
And later they're going swimming.
And did we want popsicles?
Because mom brought popsicles.
We didn't, but
as my friend headed back to the rose to work,
I sat for a few minutes at the picnic table under a big maple
and the youngest boy came back
popsicle in hand
and awkwardly climbed up onto my lap
he sat swinging his feet
and contentedly staring into the distance while he ate
and dripped his treat onto my dusty work clothes
I rested my chin on his head and hummed a little.
When he was done, he handed me the red-stained stick
and rushed back to play in the dirt again with his brother.
Back to work then, I said,
and joined my friend in the rows of zucchini.
There were so many zucchini.
that we were a bit overwhelmed.
I'd been grilling it, sauteing it,
and baking it into muffins and bread.
I'd shredded zucchini on my box grater,
and sauteed it with olive oil and garlic,
and tossed it with pasta.
I'd given it to neighbors until they'd refused anymore.
I remembered an old joke, something my uncle used to say,
that if you left your car unlocked in a parking lot this time of year,
you'd come back to find it filled with zucchini.
We weren't the only only.
only growers with an overabundance, and luckily we found a food pantry, happy to take all that we
wanted to give. They'd even set out bins at the entrance to the gardens, and we'd be leaving
an awful lot of zucchini there today.
We packed the fruits of our labor into our cars, and shook hands, silly.
and content at the successful completion of the plan we'd made,
back when the snow was still on the ground.
We'd done it.
We were farmers now.
From there, we headed back to my place,
to canned tomatoes until we'd dropped.
I'd been reading up on it
and had the counters lined with clean new jars
and my pressure canner on the stove.
There was a lot to do,
but before anything else, we needed to eat.
I laid out a plate of sliced cucumbers,
with sea salt sprinkled over them.
I'd boiled some of those new potatoes the day before.
Cut them into chunks and drizzled them with olive oil and fresh rosemary and salt.
I'd set them out on the counter with a towel draped over the bowl before leaving the house that morning,
so they'd be room temperature when we were ready to eat.
I pulled the towel off the bowl, and the smell of rosemary hit me.
Then I rinsed and halved a mess of those tiny red and orange grape tomatoes.
I drizzled olive oil over them, and ripped basil leaves into the bowl.
I added salt.
and a few garlic cloves, which I'd peeled and just cut in half.
They were for flavor, not for eating.
Then I handed the bowl to my friend,
and dug out my tomato salad stirring spoon from the back of the drawer.
It was old from my grandmother's kitchen.
kitchen. It had a long handle and was plenty big and deep. I told my friend to stir without stopping
for five minutes. She raised an eyebrow, but set to work. You can't be hasty with some things.
Some things take a long time to cook, or combine, or ripen, or grow, and all you can do is be patient.
I turned the broiler on and cut a half dozen thick slices of bread.
I laid them out on a sheet pan
and brushed them with more olive oil
and pushed them in.
She stirred, I watched the toasting bread.
Brousquetta is meant to be well toasted
so that when you top it with a juicy tomato salad,
it stays crisp.
I waited for golden brown and just a little char around the edges, and then took them out.
She dutifully kept to her work with the spoon.
While I plated up the bread and poured us glasses of tea.
Okay, I said, and she brought the board.
over to add to the rest of the feast.
The tomatoes had given some of their juice to the oil,
and the fruit was glossy and fragrant.
We piled it onto the warm toasts, picking out the garlic,
and crunching away with the satisfaction
that comes from eating food you've grown yourself.
We made our ways.
through the potatoes and cucumbers.
And when she sat back with a sigh,
I filled her tea glass
and broke the last cookie in the jar in half to share.
We looked around the kitchen,
taking in the baskets of tomatoes,
the rows of jars,
and all the work yet to do
But we didn't mind.
We'd turn on some music,
tidy up the dishes, and start.
We'd chat or work and comfortable quiet,
as we'd cored and squirt the fruit.
We'd blanch and shock it to take off the skins,
then stew them and sterilize the jars.
Finally, the jars would go into the canner, and as they came out, we set them down on towels till they cooled.
We'd split them up, and set them neatly on our pantry shelves for soups and sauces in the winter.
We were farmers, and now canners as well.
Sweet dreams.
Thank you.