A HARD FROST

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

There was a hard frost last night coating every surface. Down at the trout pond a column of vapor rose straight up looking like a ghost at the edge of the pasture and you knew without having to open the door that it was well below freezing. The dogs stared in through the kitchen window awaiting their morning bones having spent a good part of the night trying to keep the black bear that has been haunting the orchard at bay. In the darkness you could hear them peel off from the house more than a few times, barking up a storm as they raced down the lane to the spot where the last of the apples covered the grass. We got together with our friends on Saturday to make cider, the kids climbing the trees to shake the branches while the sweet, swollen globes fell like rain onto the tarp.

We gathered a couple of tubs full and ground them in the press, a variety of Pippins and Baldwins and Burford’s red flesh, each with it’s distinctive flavor. The sweetest produced a lighter cider, the color of fall leaves and the sour looked like maple syrup, light and clear. We mixed five gallons in a carboy to make hard cider and when the kids went inside for supper my friend and I cleaned up with icy cold water in the darkness next to the sugarhouse. By the time we got into the kitchen our wives and children were dishing out our meal, the aromas filling the room with the smell of apples and pork.

My arm has been troubling me the last few months and lately it has gotten worse. I don’t have the option of giving it a break so I work through the pain as best I can so I can finish up the last section of fence before the ground freezes. I understand that as you get older all of your past injuries pile up on you and deliver a different kind of discomfort that you have to learn to live with, like the lines on your face. Behind the house where the old electric lines came in there is a sort of tunnel that had been cut out over the years by the utility company, straight along the bottom edge of the sugar orchard. The majestic rock maples and old growth ash rise like columns along the boulder strewn edge of the property, but you can see where the limbs have been cut back over the last century to make way for the black ropes of electric lines.

Above the top end of the pathway about sixty feet up the east facing leaders have done something I hadn’t really noticed before; each main limb has turned itself in a graceful curve upward, one tree after another, like ladies hiking up their dresses to keep them from getting wet. Somehow these ancient trees seemed to know that in order to avoid the arborist’s saw it must turn away, contort itself to save it’s limb. I took note to check other trees around the property for a similar trait but haven’t found another example anywhere. They changed because of their history, because of past injury, into something different from all the rest.

A healthy sugar maple grown in perfect conditions is one of the majestic treasures of Nature. It rises from a solid trunk some thirty feet or more before it heads out in a series of healthy leaders, each producing a profusion of side shoots that culminates in a spreading, leafy head that resembles a tulip flower. If two or three maples grow close to one another, they each occupy the space as if it were- viewed from a distance- a singular tree. It is their nature to fill as much space as they can in order to maximize their leaf production. The side benefits to us, of course, is the blazing display in Autumn and the delicious sweet syrup in the Spring. For the tree it is to make other maples. Ironically some of our top producing maples- in terms of high sugar content sap- are the gnarled monsters that grab onto the boulders with roots like an old man’s hands. With luck they can outlive human nations on a time scale that rivals Methusala.

When I was a senior in high school I applied to one college, Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. It was my dream, back then, to become a painter. I was one of the better artists in my high school and I was passionate about painting and drawing, spending countless days of my life doing still life and landscapes when I should have been doing other things and the more I worked at it, the better I got. Part of the entrance application was to produce a self-portrait. For some reason I decided to draw my foot using a number 2 pencil on paper. I was accepted despite my less than orthodox submission and that drawing remained in my personal collection for years. I thought of it the other night as I was laying on our bed after a shower and I looked down at that same foot through the less focused eyes of a man thirty five years older. The little toe had turned under the end of my foot from the hundreds of thousands of miles it had walked in the intervening years and it had lost all of the youthful definition it had once had. No longer graceful in design, but just as functional as ever I was grateful for it’s service, both in getting me into Art School and in walking me down the countless paths that made up the journey of my life, even if it was old and ugly. For some reason I thought about the maples behind the house.

My son has come by the house to visit a couple of times in the past month, something I enjoy very much. He likes to talk about what he’s reading- Fight Club, Atlas Shrugged, Down The Shore and The Unbearable Lightness of Being are his most recent purchases, all from the used bookstore in the next town. We discuss whatever is on our minds and I realize how much I miss him being around, but am pleased that he is as independent as he is at such a young age. On his last visit he brought up his concerns about the meaning of life- where we go when it is over, why we’re even here and in his comments I can hear some of my old beliefs about such things and I tell him that it’s part of the growth process to consider things we can never know, like exercise for the body, pondering deeper thoughts stretches the limits of the mind and makes it stronger. I get that he isn’t really looking for my answers but trying to formulate his own and using me as microphone to articulate these thoughts out loud.

What he doesn’t know is that his questions have moved me to think about things I had long ago put away as I moved on through life to other ends. I no longer paint or draw, except when the younger children ask me to, and though I recall what that passion felt like, it isn’t there anymore. Life changes you no matter how hard you try to change your life and eventually you become what you are through a combination of outside influences; what you eat and what you do, who you love and who loves you. How we accept or regret those changes doesn’t really alter the outcome, only the degree to which we succeed or fail in the present. I know that my son will not find the answers to the questions that he is asking, but it is the fact that he is asking that makes me believe that he will do well in life. That curiosity is the engine behind the quality of life he’ll likely lead and as I watch him speak I study his face and his hands I see him becoming the man he will likely be in the future, speaking to his own son one day.

It’s full light out now and the house is quiet. everyone is off doing something and I have two coils of high tensile wire left to pull with my bad arm and my old feet, but I am confident that I will finish up the job ahead of the frozen ground and with some time to spare. By then the cider will have fermented and the last of the waxy leaves will have fallen from the maples out back and it will be a treat to share the products of those old trees no matter how gnarled and twisted they may be. Sometimes it takes a lifetime to figure out why we we’re here and what we’re here for, but there is a reason and even if we don’t see it ourselves, you can believe that somewhere, someone else will.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
27 Comments
ace
ace
October 27, 2015 10:02 am

I really like this guy and his writing.

fear & loathing
fear & loathing
October 27, 2015 10:06 am

another gem, thank you

Maggie
Maggie
October 27, 2015 10:41 am

Pure poetry in your prose, HSF… Are you descended from another kind of Frost?

http://poetry.about.com/video/Robert-Frost–The-Mending-Wall.htm

Stucky
Stucky
October 27, 2015 11:15 am

The picture accompanying the article violates the “no nipple” rule. Just sayin’

Nice piece, as usual. FWIW, I still don’t know why I’m here.

bluestem
bluestem
October 27, 2015 12:30 pm

Stucky, they aren’t real, so anything goes, John

bb
bb
October 27, 2015 12:59 pm

I would say this part of the problem. We as a nation are always trying to let people make up their own minds. Whether it be sons ,daughters , communities and nation. Everyone’s opinion is as valuable as the next. Kinda like all cultures are equal and worthy of praise. We then go off in every direction like chickens with their heads ringed off.Ever seen that ?

People always act like there is a lot gray area in life.Kinda like multiple choice when in reality there is very little gray area at all .You hear people say just follow you heart.What if you kid has the heart of a whore?.Or a mass murderer?

Muck About
Muck About
October 27, 2015 2:29 pm

Fine “mental picture full” piece of your lovely prose..Thanks..

MA

Maggie
Maggie
October 27, 2015 2:33 pm

Stucky, Admin clarified for me that the “no nipple” rule was AWD’s and that he never implemented it.

Stucky
Stucky
October 27, 2015 2:59 pm

Maggie

I believe it was SSS who made the No Nip rule.

Ghost of AWD
Ghost of AWD
October 27, 2015 3:07 pm

I always followed the no nipple rule.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Guy
Guy
October 27, 2015 5:52 pm

HSF, might I recommend to your son “Gulag Archipelago” by Solzhenitsyn? I never read a book that encapsulates the darkest aspects of humanity, while also showing the strength and resilience of the soul as well as it did. He may not get the answers he’s looking for, but he will gain something from it.

ragman
ragman
October 27, 2015 5:53 pm

Excellent! We also had our first frost a week ago Saturday. 27F, colder than a witch’s tit. The kids saw two black bears about 75 yds from the house and I immediately ordered a couple of canisters of serious bear repellant.

card802
card802
October 27, 2015 6:32 pm

“Sometimes it takes a lifetime to figure out why we we’re here and what we’re here for, but there is a reason and even if we don’t see it ourselves, you can believe that somewhere, someone else will.”

What all of this “living” is about has perplexed me for some time now, mostly since I came to TBP!
Must be my age creeping up as well, I hope I don’t turn into a grumpy old man, like my old man.

Wet t-shirts always make me happy though, so there is that.

Maggie
Maggie
October 27, 2015 6:32 pm

Aha… you are right again, AWD. I am remiSSS in my memory.

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
October 27, 2015 8:23 pm

#FreeTheNipple – along with the rest of everyone’s bodies, especially from the cold claws of Statists.

You got one of two types of plumbing, male or female. You got the ability to develop it as you choose: flabby, rock-solid or regular (between the two). Some folks, genetic winners, wear it better; others, losers (genetic or otherwise) wear it worse. Anyone above the age of 7 should have seen both types, enough so that the shock wears off; anyone who hasn’t needs more education.

Now if you’ll pardon me, I got to go powder the folds of my potbelly to avoid the chafes, put on the bra for my man-boobs and squeeze into my girdle so I can get through the doorway. I should be back in a few hours.

ottomatik
ottomatik
October 27, 2015 8:43 pm

thank you

OldeVirginian
OldeVirginian
October 27, 2015 9:25 pm

Mr farmer i love your essays here. You are still painting only with words now. The way you describe remembering the feel of a lost passion resonates with an old dude like me. I envy your hands on life over my hand on a mouse and keyboard life.

KaD
KaD
October 27, 2015 10:24 pm

When I was a kid we used to go to the family farm where my cousin lived a few times a year. Great memories. I feel sorry for kids today who don’t get to go out to the country and sit in front of a computer all day.

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
October 27, 2015 10:40 pm

Just bootyfull Hardscramble. There is a wistfulness to yer prose that makes me think you are somewhat hesitant to cast off yer Evangelical Protestant roots,particicularly in regards ter the afterlife.

You got cider down, but what does it gain a man ter learn how ter make maple syrup but lose his own soul?

Are you teaching yer admirable chirren to ask Jesus into their hearts or are you definitevaly abandoning your previous spiritual leanings in a substantial way?

PS. If yer after uh comment count, yer gonna max out at around 25 with this snoozer.

starfcker
starfcker
October 27, 2015 11:03 pm
SSS
SSS
October 28, 2015 12:35 am

Ok, I’m back and full of piss and vinegar after 6 days of Internet isolation.

Example One.

“When I was a senior in high school I applied to one college, Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. It was my dream, back then, to become a painter. I was one of the better artists in my high school and I was passionate about painting and drawing …… Part of the entrance application was to produce a self-portrait. For some reason I decided to draw my foot using a number 2 pencil on paper. I was accepted despite my less than orthodox submission”
—-HSF, in his article

You’re starting to annoy me. Artist, stand-up comedian, farmer, accomplished writer, etc. WTF else is in your background? Acolyte in Stephen Hawkins’ secret astrophysics society?

Example Two.

My rule is NOT “no nipples.” It is “no nudity,” and the person who violated it is Stucky with his post at 3:07 pm under the “Ghost of AWD” pseudonym. Don’t let it happen again, dipshit

Example Three.

I don’t care about frost and the damn sugar maples, Hardscrabble Farmer. Are your hogs in good health? Is there tasty bacon in the future? Heh.

TBP’s Official Curmudgeon,
SSS

Maggie
Maggie
October 28, 2015 1:46 am

Whew! What a relief to know that… I’ve been waiting to post this for
AGES.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Stucky
Stucky
October 28, 2015 6:30 am

“It is “no nudity,” and the person who violated it is Stucky with his post at 3:07 pm under the “Ghost of AWD” pseudonym. Don’t let it happen again, dipshit ” ————— SSS

It wasn’t me. So, how ’bout you go fuck yourself?

Since I’m already in such a good mood this morning (see copfuk beats up girl thread), I’ll go on record as letting you know you’re such a goddamn hypocrite with your no-nudity rule. You, an old geezer, who gets his jollies off posting damn-near nude pictures of Selma and her bouncing saggy titties preaching to us about nudity? Hilarious hypocritical horseshit.

Maggie
Maggie
October 28, 2015 6:44 am

@Stucky… you are violating HSF’s lovely prose with your blasphemous titties, goddamn, and go fuck yourself comments. I am here to preach to the choirboys.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
October 28, 2015 8:25 am

Mags!

SSS
SSS
October 28, 2015 12:01 pm

“Making you mad makes me happy.”
—-Stucky@SSS, years ago

“So, how ’bout you go fuck yourself?”
—-Stucky@SSS, above

[imgcomment image[/img]

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
October 29, 2015 12:18 am