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« California Redux | Main | A TROPICAL HOLIDAY IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST »
Thursday
Sep022010

Thorns are gonna eat'em alive

by Melani Alexander Fuchs

 

History repeated itself today. Two sisters came to pick blackberries on the farm. They told stories of picking as little girls and headed to the patches, basket in hand, containers at the ready, arms and legs bare. “Thorns are gonna eat’em alive,” I thought.

As stories go, berries have been picked on this farm since the 20’s. My grandfather bought this acreage just after the war and even though at that time it was a cow farm, and there was no undergrowth in the fields, there must have been berries in the hedgerows. Now that the fields have islands of undergrowth which surround mature trees, (looks like a park now,) the berries are everywhere. Out the back door, off the back porch and within 100 feet I am having breakfast any time of the day-by the handful. This lasts through August and into September. We eat all we can, and put quart bags full in the big freezer. In January, pulling them out is a delightful treat, especially on vanilla ice cream with hot fudge.

I remember years ago, my parents would put an ad in the shopper and offer to share. Anyone with the willingness to brave the thorns could pick all you could eat and fill as many vessels as you could carry.  Yes, there were that many berries. One beautiful August afternoon, two elderly sisters came to pick. They were decked out in polyester slacks and blouses, sun visors and sensible shoes. I remember them telling my mother they had picked berries as little girls and were so excited to pick berries together again! They even had their original berry buckets with them. For them, this was a walk down memory lane. As we watched them walk down the lane way chatting like the little girls of yesterday, my brother said, “thorns are gonna to eat’em alive!” As the hours passed, we did begin to worry. With hundreds of acres “out back” and the trails mowed but confusing, who knew where they might end up? Four hours later they did return. The picture in my mind now is as clear as the digital pictures on my computer screen. Smiles from ear to ear and purple smears crisscrossed their cheeks. The neat buns that had previously peaked out from under their hats were now sweaty tendrils of gray tucked behind ears and hanging like lengths of uncorded wool.  And how right my brother was, Polyester is not berry picking material.  Their once neat and pristine slacks were snagged, and woven in the pulls were lengths of weed and leaves. The sleeves of their blouses were rolled up and bloody trails of berry vine protection were noticeable across their forearms. Seemingly unaware of their appearance, these two ladies reliving days gone by, happily piled berry buckets in the backseat of a just as rumpled vehicle, and with many thanks and backward waves headed home I am sure to freeze and make pies.

We all stood in wonder. But as I pick the same fields and the berry bushes of generations later, I treasure the tussles with berry vines and have perfected the side step and flatten necessary to create a path in the densest of thickets. I have reached into yard-side patches with abandon in my shorts and t-shirt, not a wise choice. I usually wear boots, jeans, a long sleeve-heavy shirt and still I come away with tiny stinging scrapes and scratches; well worth the reach. In the end, I too I have a full stomach, seeds between my teeth and a purplish grin.  And, I always have berries in the freezer. 

 

Melani Fuchs lives in Ithaca NY with her husband and  two children. She lives on the original farm purchased by her grandfather in the early 1930's. She is a Montessori teacher at the EAC Montessori School of Ithaca where she also teaches primary Physical Education and Brain Gym. She is a musician, an artist, an equestrian and enjoys running her two border collies in agility.

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Reader Comments (5)

I could taste the juicy blackberries and the preciousness of the memories - thank you!

September 2, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAysha Griffin

A tasty piece. Recalled many days of berry picking in Maine and Vermont.

September 3, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterjules

Nice, Melanie! Thanks for sharing your berry-picking memories.

Rachel

September 3, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterRachel Dickinson

What a wonderfully vivid story. I was right there with the berry pickers! I could taste the scrumptious berries and almost feel the prickers scraping across my skin. Thanks for sharing!

September 3, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBarbara Grau Agar

I too am a berry picking fan.

In mid to late June, could go to a fruit farm, not 15 miles from the centre of South Yorkshire's industry....and there would be larks singing from on high, the soft scent of ripening fruit...strawberries, raspberries, white and red currants. Maybe some new potatoes ready for a little teasing with a garden fork....

I used to have a glorious morning, picking...sunshine wall to wall. The afternoon would be spent making jams and freezing etc...to keep the family in jams ..making pies etc. .(not that they appreciated it....but hayho..they didnt appreciate anything or anyone..) But still glorious days.

Or even further back down memory lane...going onto the moors above Sheffield..with my beloved Gran...bilberry picking...
Real Food!!
Thanks for sharing....
Janet

July 31, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterJanet Woodward

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