(skip this top part if you are only interested in the berry picking...)
It is hot. I mean very hot! In the early a.m. before the sun gets too strong I work in the garden and do my outside chores. This includes soaking the garden plants and weeding and plucking off the dead parts of the tomatoes and etc… I have my system of collecting rainwater and, so far this year, have not had to use any well water for the garden. That is about to change as we have not had significant rain fall since last week. My six day supply will be gone tonight. It will take a good downpour for at least an hour for the three rain barrels to fill and that won’t be happening for the next couple of days. This evening I will fill one of the barrels from the well.
It is hot. I mean very hot! In the early a.m. before the sun gets too strong I work in the garden and do my outside chores. This includes soaking the garden plants and weeding and plucking off the dead parts of the tomatoes and etc… I have my system of collecting rainwater and, so far this year, have not had to use any well water for the garden. That is about to change as we have not had significant rain fall since last week. My six day supply will be gone tonight. It will take a good downpour for at least an hour for the three rain barrels to fill and that won’t be happening for the next couple of days. This evening I will fill one of the barrels from the well.
It takes a lot for me to hide in the air conditioning but this
summer I am happy to have the cool, electric breeze. The only thing better would be a swimming
pool but I don’t have one of those so I have to find alternative, indoor
activities so I can stay in the ‘cool’. My
journal is one. House chores is
another. Watching TV and reading fill a
couple of hours but I hate watching the TV.
This morning I finished the outdoor stuff and instead of hiding in the
A/C I took the bike and headed out for a ride through the state park. I packed my backpack, a banana, a yogurt,
some ice in a baggy and headed down the road.
My destinations were vague.
My first stop was in Fort
Montgomery at the
motorcycle shop where I drooled over the bling.
They had a nice used BMW Roadster (a 2012 with under 2K miles) which
they took on trade for a ‘Multi Strada’.
(must be nice to have bucks!) Tempting, but too much money for a bike in
my opinion. If it had been a clean ‘California’, a little
bit older and a lot cheaper, I probably would have been riding a different bike
this afternoon. I did find out there is
a group of retired guys who meet at the shop every day and go for a ride
together. Sounds like something I should
try out next week.
I left the bike shop and took Firefighter's Memorial Drive through the military
academy at West Point and then 293 to the
parkway. Nice back woods road with no
traffic. Speed can be a problem as there
is a lot of wild life but I was in a slow-goin’ mood and the cool breeze made
me feel wonderful. After that, on the Long Mountain Pkwy,
I didn’t even mind the idiots who were tailgating me –and I was doing
seventy! I left them when I took the
turn off to old route 17 heading to Tuxedo-another old four lane highway that
is long legged and relaxed. I stopped
for gas in Tuxedo and turned around. I
was getting tired and the heat was coming off the asphalt in waves. I retraced my steps back towards home.
When I got to the ‘goat path’ (the name given the
approach road for the Bear
Mountain Bridge
from the Annesville Circle)
I took advantage of the fact that there were few cars sharing the road and I could do it the
way it should be done. This
twisting, curving road is a bikers dream. If you don’t have at least one nerve jangling
moment where you think you might not make it out alive then you didn’t ride it
right. Call me an idiot, I don’t
care! Anyway, when you are almost down
to the Annesville Circle
there is an old historic toll house. I
turned into the gravel parking lot outside the toll house and parked under a
tree.
I know from hiking there with Benny that there are the most
magnificent berry patches right out back of the house, hidden in the
woods. The berries are protected by gobs
of poison ivy and their own prickly thorns.
But if you know how to pick them and how to avoid the ivy you can eat
your fill. I unlocked my top case and
took out my lunch. I sliced up the
banana and stirred it into the yogurt. I
walked into the patch and as I ate the yogurt I picked the sweet raspberries
and plopped them into the cup. Eat,
pick, stir, repeat. Un-fu*king
believable. The berries were so ripe
that they were sticky with their own sugar.
They melted like chocolate on my fingers. When I was done with the yogurt I went back
to the bike and took out the bag of ice, which was three quarters melted. I drank the icy water out of the bag and then
proceeded to fill the bag with more berries.
When it was filled up I put it back into the insulated lunch box and
into the top case. I brought them home
to eat later.
Back in the house, my shower was great. I have some
DVD’s from the library and some primo left-overs in the refrigerator for
diner. I have my hand picked dessert and
tonight’s Shabbat service (with my friends) to look forward to. The heat is tough. But today was good. I am one lucky Fu*ker.
2 comments:
You had me with the BMW but when you got to the blackberry bush, I was right there with you. But it was a thousand years ago, farther up NY state, and those bushes were covered with poisoned ivy too. Later, I too, would be covered with the effects of the poison ivy but picking berries in the heat of the summer is one of those wistful childhood memories. Thanks for helping me find it again. :)
I love that you read the stuff...But even better it brings you some joy. That is my wonderful reward.
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