Walnut trees ... the black-walnut variety, in particular ... have long been a part of my life.
There were two which grew near the bluffs, a short hike from the house in which I was growing up.
The walnuts were mine for the gathering. I would wait for some windy autumn weather, then I would venture up there with a burlap bag in which I would stow the found treasures carpeting the ground underneath the trees.
Of course, that was just the beginning. The next step was to lug them home. Then the fun really began.
I used a hammer to remove the juicy hulls which covered the shells. The result: A hefty pile of walnuts ready to begin drying out ... a process of "curing," becoming ready for cracking open to expose the delicious meats inside.
Another result was a pair of thoroughly stained hands. I recall my hands being so stained that they looked like they were wearing gloves.
Ah, the memories.
Every autumn I find myself thinking of those trees again ... wondering if they're still there ... if some youngster is enjoying their output as much as I did.
Meanwhile, the poem:
WALNUT WISDOM
The black walnut's
seething green leaves,
steeping all summer
in the raging sun,
are turning yellow,
randomly twirling
to earth, the leaden
thumps of fallen
fruit providing
an uneven cadence
on the long bridge
of sunny afternoons.
Bruised and smashed,
their juicy hulls
draw back from those
dark interiors where
their secrets lie,
awaiting squirrels,
whack of a hammer,
the outside chance
of becoming a tree.
This, the walnut
knows, is autumn’s
beginning, a time
of payoffs, endings,
another slow turn
of the wheel.
© 2002
(originally published in Potomac Review)
Today's word: twirling
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