This was written to honor an experience with a tree and also as a part of Greenwoman Magazine's Blog Tour. This "Literary Garden" magazine combines facets of my favorite things: nature, the feminine, gardening and the earth itself.
Below today's essay, there are some reviews of the magazine. You would be wise to check it out. Now please read my experience with a tree that was both difficult to define and divine to experience.
An Invitation to an Intimate Experience... with a Tree
She rested there, on her side, draped on a downy mattress
and surrounded by the scent of pure love and rebirth.
I was there merely to take photos and sit. I didn’t realize
I would be a witness to this, her final bloom season. This would be the final time this particular
almond tree blossomed into all her glory for the other trees up and down the
neat rows of almond trees to see.
It’s a short bloom season but one which makes Bakersfield
photographers – professional and amateur alike – sing with joy. Maybe “shoot
with joy” is a better term, but for me it is definitely singing. Stepping into
a blooming almond orchard is truly akin to stepping into heaven.
It is a separate from the outside world, nearly silent place dappled with darkness
and light. The scent is heady, a sort of fragrant lusty sweetness that doesn’t
hold language very well in its aroma. I brought my notebook. I brought a
camera. I brought some books to read.
My open heart and observant spirit are simply who I am.
This is why I shouldn’t be surprised by the incredibly
bittersweet sight of a downed tree, still stubbornly blossoming, still
declaring the can bear fruit, even if only her roots are still attached to the
ground, refusing to detach from her mother, Earth.
I did something I have done with other trees “in the wild”
as in not in my backyard. I got on my back and pushed myself into her depths,
face up. It looks sort of like my brothers used to look when they rolled
underneath the cars they were working on.
I wanted to sit with her, I wanted to allow her to speak to
me, I wanted her see how much I appreciated and valued this unexpected privilege.
Never in my life have I expected to see a fallen tree. I
have, in past years, seen entire orchards raised by farmers. They were seen as
orchards past their prime, trees no longer yielding a high quality crop. It was
time for the land to lie fallow before planting a brand new crop of trees.
I’m nearing menopause these days and sometimes worry that if
I were an almond or a peach or a cherry or a plum tree, I would be raised. This
tree, though, she was still in her prime years.
I have no idea how she fell. She was in the middle of the
orchard, close to its heartbeat. It was quite a distance from the busy road. Wind was unlikely to come
whipping through the middle of the orchard. It might hug the orchard, but not
push through to slay only one tree in the middle.
What I did know was this tree offered herself to me.
She gave me her blooms, she invited me to become intimate
with her and experience her in a way I doubt any other people would experience
her. I breathed in her scent, I cried with her. I scribbled some near
unintelligible words onto the page, praying I would somehow be able to
translate for her later.
The time has yet to come. It may or it may not. I will,
however, forever have this unnameable experience, covered in newborn blossoms,
a quilt offered to me by a dying almond tree.
= = =
"Greenwoman
Magazine celebrates garden writing in all its forms: fiction, creative
nonfiction, poetry, commentary, biography, art, and comics!
Daring and
fun, Greenwoman is for the hip gardener who loves digging into the
world of art and environmental thought that underlies gardening."
Greenwoman
Magazine is a completely independent, one-woman-owned-and-run publication.
(Well, two-women, when Sandra’s daughter Zora, who is the Deputy Editor,
has time from her full-time college work).
"I think
this magazine will be one of the best gifts 2011 has given humanity and I’m
absolutely serious about this. I hope you will check it out. When I did that, I
clicked immediately on the subscription button and signed myself up. Now for
those of you who know me, you will know this is significant because I have a
very strict rule about not purchasing anything over the internet." —Tammi Hartung, author
of Homegrown Herbs
“. . . I
realized that this was a periodical loathe to box itself in or stoop to cliché.
The topics would be familiar but the twists and turns would be unique because
the human experience is unique."—Grace Peterson, "Gardening with
Grace" blog
"Greenwoman is
a fresh and hip magazine bringing the spirit of gardening to the forefront . .
. It is unlike any other magazine I have read."—Elise Bowan
“Greenwoman filled
the gap in my life that I didn't know existed: a magazine that connected all my
interests: the earth, gardening, and a feminine perspective. I couldn't believe
my luck upon discovering it! Greenwoman will now replace some of my
subscriptions that were only gardening, that ignored earth
issues...Viva Greenwoman. —Elisabeth Kinsey, Greenwoman's Sex in the
Garden columnist.
# # #
To see excerpts from the Fourth Issue (now available via subscribption which I heartily recommend) visit Greenwoman's Current Issue online.
Wildly eclectic, the issue includes poetry, comics, fiction, creative non ficti0on interviews and more. Support this woman owned literary adventure now.
"I think
this magazine will be one of the best gifts 2011 has given humanity and I’m
absolutely serious about this. I hope you will check it out. When I did that, I
clicked immediately on the subscription button and signed myself up. Now for
those of you who know me, you will know this is significant because I have a
very strict rule about not purchasing anything over the internet." —Tammi Hartung, author
of Homegrown Herbs
“. . . I
realized that this was a periodical loathe to box itself in or stoop to cliché.
The topics would be familiar but the twists and turns would be unique because
the human experience is unique."—Grace Peterson, "Gardening with
Grace" blog
"Greenwoman is
a fresh and hip magazine bringing the spirit of gardening to the forefront . .
. It is unlike any other magazine I have read."—Elise Bowan
“Greenwoman filled
the gap in my life that I didn't know existed: a magazine that connected all my
interests: the earth, gardening, and a feminine perspective. I couldn't believe
my luck upon discovering it! Greenwoman will now replace some of my
subscriptions that were only gardening, that ignored earth
issues...Viva Greenwoman. —Elisabeth Kinsey, Greenwoman's Sex in the
Garden columnist.
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