Gally, golly.

It makes the sound of biting hard things with your teeth.

The sound was coming from my mouth.

Because they are sitting on the ground in front of the field and chewing on freshly harvested hatsuka.

As always, the flavour of this hatsuka is not too flattering.

In terms of eating the root part, it is obvious that it would be better to cook it thoroughly and cook it.

However, the harvested vegetables will only be treated as belonging to my family if I raise them.

But because my hunger won't allow it, I'm just grinding it right after the harvest.

Progress has been made in improving Hatsuka varieties.

Differences in each characteristic began to emerge gradually in the six divided fields.

However, the difference in taste has not yet appeared.

In such a situation, when I was eating and comparing each of them, I noticed something that bothered me.

It was about the magic I use to plow the fields.

The magic I developed uniquely is used by combining the magic I have inside my body with the magic I have incorporated from the outside.

In the basic image, while repeating deep breathing, the magic will be activated after filling the body with well-developed magic.

Naturally, if you use magic, the refined magic in your body will be consumed.

Whether you take a deep breath or try to activate magic next, you can't merge it and refine it because the magic that originally existed in your body is gone.

It means that it will become a state of so-called magic failure.

Now, what do you do to restore the magic in your body?

Until now, I had vaguely thought that it would recover over time.

In fact, it's not wrong.

But it wasn't right either.

It's only recently that we have been able to secure food in a stable manner.

The magic in my body was restored by eating food.

I hadn't noticed before because it didn't mean that I would recover immediately after eating.

It will take a while for magic to be created so that what you eat does not immediately become blood and meat.

That's why I mistakenly assumed that magic would recover over time.

And what matters here is how much magic is restored when you eat it.

In fact, even a few types of hatsuka that have started to differ recently have started to differ in the amount of recovery.

Although there is no change in taste as much as Hasa, there is a difference in the amount of magic recovered.

I might have figured out what kind of stimulus this would give me.

Originally, it was a variety improvement that started with an interest in mind after fulfilling the major premise of ensuring food.

I gradually shifted to improving the variety while paying more attention to magic than taste.

I remember watching a popular show in my previous life where Idols were farming.

There should have been an indicator when we improved the rice.

That certainly seeded into a large container of water, making saline with a lot of salt.

Salt water takes advantage of the fact that objects are easier to float than ordinary water and has the effect of easily sifting heavy and light seeds.

Essentially the bigger one is justice.

This is an easy way, but it seems to have been a very helpful way to improve the variety.

I succeeded in getting this method out of my head, and I tried it, but it didn't work out.

Because unlike rice, nothing was light enough to float in salt water.

Besides, the way I wanted to find it was to sort things that would heal a lot of magic.

The previous method, even if successful, is likely irrelevant to the difference in magic healing amount.

The most definite way to do this is to prioritize the ones that have recovered the most while eating each day.

But I was three years old and had only a little flesh, and I couldn't compare it to eating it.

Can't you figure it out somehow?

I even kept taking care of the field with such thoughts in mind.

And the problem was solved one day.

On that day, I also cast magic on the soil to plow the fields.

She always closes her eyes to concentrate and breathes deeply repeatedly to activate her magic.

However, on this day I began to become magical, and without closing my eyes, I began to breathe deeply into the magic.

Take a deep breath of the magic beneath your navel and blend it with the magic you've taken in to transform it into a viscous magic that spreads all over your body.

And when the magic rises from your stomach to your chest and head.

With my eyes open, I can see the field where the hatsuka is planted.

The field was blurred and shaken.

I thought it was an illusion of my eyes, but when I looked closely, it wasn't.

The scenery was spreading like a loose and clear gas rising from the field.

Looking at that, I thought, "Hello, I've decided to focus my magic on my own eyes."

This was the trigger.

The sight became clearer when I concentrated my magic in my eyes.

The clear gases are tinted and the light blue gases are rising from the field.

By and large, when I pulled out the hatsuka growing in the field, the gas originated from the hatsuka itself.

Blue was present not only in the air but also in the edible roots of the hatsuka.

So, there is no leakage into the air from the root part, and the blue remains in that part.

Perhaps this blue is the magic.

Nothing to be sure of, but I felt it.

And it was thought that the idea would not be so wrong.

Because the blue color appeared darker than the one with the highest amount of magic recovery among the hatsuka that I had ever eaten, and conversely, the color was thinner than the one with the lower amount of recovery.

This is how I learned how to find out if I didn't eat the magical amount of vegetables.