In my garden of earthly delights
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My world is
circumscribed by the boundaries of the gringo part of the rancho. I walk the
lanes.
This morning
when I arrived at my turn-around spot out by the entrance to the highway, I
stopped to marvel. I saw, heading toward Ahualulco, a man on a three-wheel motorcycle,
a custom job, wearing a modified helmet to resemble something from WWI, you
know, Snoopy and the Red Baron.
The bike itself
was black with silver trim. The front end, like an alligator snout, and I’m not
familiar with biker terms, but I’d call it a “low-rider”, with high handlebars,
high enough to make the driver reach upward to steer. The rear end, the part
with two wheels, was made from the back of an ancient Volkswagon Beetle.
I know it
sounds corny, but I had to shout my delight.
The next
time I reached the turn-around, a young couple passed riding an ordinary Italian
motorcycle, going toward town. I smiled and waved. “What a crazy woman,” the
driver must have thought, but he looked back and chin waved.
Even though
I am bound to Rancho Esperanza by the rampaging pandemic coronavirus, I am
aware of activities in my outer community.
Every
community can be identified by its odors.
Of course, smells are dependent on seasons. This morning when I awoke, I
thought I smelled cane fields burning. Now, six hours later, spirals of black
ash fall onto my patio.
Cane
harvest-time has arrived early this year, by at least two weeks. Leo told me
that a week ago he saw engineers from the processing factory in Tala walking
the fields, collecting stalks to take to the laboratory to test for sugar
content. Our early harvest is a result of a dry, dry year.
In town,
this is the day all the bands in Etzatlan gather in the Plaza to play in honor
of Our Lady. In turn, the musicians receive special blessings for making music.
This year is different though. The bands march in and play, are blessed, and
leave. No parades. No marching horses. No crowds of people, dancing in the
street. No vendors hawking wares.
It is still
warm here in this high valley but every day I drag my chair to a different spot
chasing the shade. The sun seems to hug the horizon all the way from up to
down, close to a twelve hour spread between light and dark. This is our winter
light, low angles from now until February.
A small
flock of yellow-heads, blackbirds, flew over, the first I’ve seen. Last year we
saw hardly any. In former years, flocks blackened the sky with a prolonged loud
whooooosh. I’m glad to see the small flock, hopefully a forerunner of more to
come, flocks rejuvenated, the lost brought back into the fold.
Our gardener
Leo brought me the last mandarinas and the first figs from Julie’s garden.
Julie is in Minnesota, like many of us, awaiting a vaccine before travel.
My nose
tells me the baked beans are ready to take out of the oven. I baked fresh bread
this morning.
My son
called to get directions to make sopa seca de fideo so I know he truly is
recovering.
My grandson
raised a 35 pound turkey. How will they shove it in the oven!
It is enough
cause for Thanksgiving.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
November 26,
2020
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