I woke
up this morning to find a thin, cold fog reaching in at my slightly-open
window, and a freezing little breeze nibbling at my toes. It’s October. The
leaves, while still gorgeous, are past their peak, and are now falling in
successively thicker clouds of swirling color whenever the wind gusts. Last
Tuesday we were greeted by the shocking sight of snow capping Hunger Mountain.
And day by day, the chill in the air increases in its rush towards winter,
interrupted only briefly by short sunny days that fill our house with natural
warmth and remind us of last summer’s beauty.
What a
world away from the California non-winters I am still used to! :) Yet there is so
very much about this cold land that I have come to love. Not the least being
the awesome skiing (starts in 55 days, 8 ½ hours)…..
This
morning, as I admired the pink-streaked sky and the brilliant ball of sun
inching above the far range, my mind wandered deliciously back to a morning in
California last August.
It was
cool and quiet in the Valley. We awoke early, our eager ears picking up the
sounds we knew so well: magpies calling to each other in the mulberry trees,
and the unmistakable, friendly noise of sprinklers in the orchard. With an hour
before our first meeting of the day, we decided to take a bit of a risk: drive
out behind our old home, through the wonderfully familiar almond orchard with
all the trees we named as kids, back to our favorite cornfield.
We used
to walk there nearly every day for many years. We’d meander through the
orchards, munching on stray almonds left behind by the harvesters, until we
came to the dusty farm road that runs the length of a huge field of corn. It
was always peaceful out there. We were always barefoot (keeping a weather eye
out for malevolent goat-head bushes), the dogs would run along with us, and
there was plenty of white sandy soil in which to cool our toes.
{fresh almonds = perfection}
On this
morning it was all the same. The same as it was 13 years ago when we left that
little spot of hot and dusty paradise. Memories came rushing back in a torrent
as Mums and I parked our zippy Jetta beside the tall corn and stepped out into
a world we knew so well. The corn had the same look to it. The almond trees
still stood, solidly, a carpet of nuts on the ground below from a busy shaker’s
work. I took off my shoes and felt the cool earth under my feet, heard the wind
rustle softly through the corn stalks, smelled the crisp sharpness of smoke
from someone’s burnpile.
We stood
there for several minutes, just letting the familiar sights and sounds and
smells envelope us. It was amazing. It was perfection.
Now,
looking back on it, sorting through my copious pictures and re-living it
through all the memories, I can almost feel the warm sun again and catch the whiff
of faraway garlic from the farm down the road. And just when I realize I miss
it, the sun achieves its goal of topping Hunger Mountain and I feel the sudden
delicious burst of warmth; the thin clouds of fog fizzle under the sun’s
influence, leaving a clear picture of breathtaking reds and yellows and oranges
where a simple green forest used to be, and I realize that I actually am smelling garlic. Hmm. Should have put
my garlic-work jacket some other place. Ha.
That has
been Ibby’s and my occupation this last week: opening, sorting, bagging, digging,
and planting 60,000 cloves of garlic by hand. It has been a saga! :) Long, and
satisfying, and grueling, and enjoyable.
And
every single day, without fail, by the end of the afternoon there is only one
thing I really, really want. There’s just something about smelling the strong,
pungent aroma of fresh garlic all day long with hardly a break, handling the
smooth, hard cloves and listening to the papery sound of the protective layers
as we peel them away…
I just
want fettucine alfredo.
Not another saga?! =) Hehe.
ReplyDeleteAh, I love this post. More like this, please. Your writing style is beautiful.
Love you.
Girlfriend, you are such an awesome cook that you could make that fettuccine alfredo with your eyes closed. And it would rival the best restaurant dish out there. Just sayin'
ReplyDeleteMums