The next night, last night, we harvested the tiny bit of
honey we felt we could take from our bees after such a strange summer. The
honey was dark, almost black, and tasted like caramel. Zach said it was
knotweed honey. It it is entirely different from the floral, wine-y honey we
harvested at midsummer last year. The
kids helped us spin the black, heavy heart out of the combs, then we put them
to bed. After they were asleep I finished reading “Cinnamon and Gunpowder,” a
novel about a chef who is captured by a redheaded lady pirate and forced to
cook for her. It was a rich, sweet, dark story.
As we slowly filled our bell jars with the viscous liquid we had just
harvested, the earth’s shadow slid dark red over the moon in a full lunar
eclipse “supermoon” – the first since 1987. When a thin crescent of light
reappeared, it shone through the sunroom window onto the new jars of black
pirate honey.
I turned 40 this year. I, too, feel richer, darker, and sweeter.
I am right where I want to be at this moment. Zach and I celebrate 13 happy
years of marriage tonight, and my father turns 74. Many dreams are coming true
for the people around us: my friend Andrea and two of my cousins have found true love, the Boghs have found
their homestead on a hill in town, and my sister has seen the first client in
her new business. I pray for our friends who are still waiting or searching,
whether it is for love, or the gift of a child, or a place that feels like
home: may this be the year. And
although the world is facing much darkness right now, may we pull together – as
we do in a New England winter – to help each other through regardless of our differences.
such a beautiful summary on the passing of time... the generosity of summer and the need for fulfillment and finding "just enough" (and in that abundance!) for the winter ahead... thank you for writing this, Kristin!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Sunny! Hope to see you sometime around T-day this year. :)
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