
At the local general store, I buy an analog clock for twelve dollars, find a single AA battery in my desk drawer, and, tick tock, done. The clock is the kind my parents always had in their kitchen, pre-digital craze, where you’d watch the minute hands while, say, boiling an egg.
The clock reminds me of those countless hours in a hospital bed, pondering not a baking apple pie but the length of a minute. How long that minute hand needed to click around a circle.
Late Saturday afternoon, a friend and I walk through the woods towards Stannard Pond, in search of ramps and something else more elusive, lung-fulls of serenity, perhaps, in this forest where the autumn sunlight falls down, the branches unleaved in April, the cedars silvery. We find patches of those wild leeks, carpets of trout lily leaves, two spring beauties that have not yet opened. My friend spies these; I crouched and gently cup one folded blossom in my hand, gentle with its thread of a stalk. Soon, the forest floors will be covered with these gems. For now, I contemplate this white-and-pink loveliness, wrapped in emerald.
Driving down that mountain’s back road, I spy a Cooper’s hawk on a wire. This steep road was ravaged by flood a few years back, and folks are rebuilding, small boxes of dwellings without siding. Persistent. In my bones, I’m both worn and enlivened, the road dust and sunlight billowing in through the open car windows. Tick-tock, the slowness of a moment.
“Things take the time they take.” ~ Mary Oliver
The closest we have to ramps in Germany is “bärlauch”, which literally means “bear’s wild leek” and it is similar in French (l’ail des ours). I think they are slightly different species from ramps, but I am no botanist. It only really is good in March and maybe early April. We made pesto from it and then froze several jars of it, have been maybe once a week having pasta and then enjoying one of those little jars along with it.
What will you do with the ramps?
Pesto is delicious made from ramps. I ate mine with plum vinegar—also delicious in soup.
I guess it’s time to head out in search of ramps and morels. Spring is finally here!
Yay! Spring! Although I found snow today…
Shhh…
“lung-fulls of serenity” ❤
💗
Do you know that many (most? I hate to think that…) children do not know how to tell time from an analog clock? I don’t currently have one and now, I want one.
Hard to imagine reading an analog clock is becoming a lost skill….