Late summer days in a vineyard,
the bounty borne by years of patient nurture drips from the vines.
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Aromella clusters in the South Vineyard, September 2014 |
Clusters of amber, bronze,
apricot, and deep purple bear a perilous, and transitory, prosperity.
With each passing day
under a slanting September sun, the color deepens.
The fruit sweetens.
As the crop ripens, birds
circle overhead, menacingly.
We worry about our
perilous prosperity, borne as fragile fruit.
On misty vineyard
mornings, a doe and her speckled fawns seek to breach the bird netting, and sample
forbidden fruit.
As the poet observed,
nothing gold can stay.
And that goes for
September, which swept in with a blaze of goldenrod along the creek bed, and
the transitory bounty of the crop this golden month bears.
Before we turn the page to
October and autumn’s demise, all of the fruit, or that which does not succumb
to the appetite of the creatures with whom we share this temporary paradise, will
be harvested from the vines.
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Frontenac Gris in the North Vineyard, September 2014 |
Our
winged and hoofed friends sweep in to glean what remains.
There comes a day, after
the last harvest, when we walk the denuded vineyard rows, where the jeweled
tones of the crop we nurtured are replaced by lemon yellow leaves, with the
first crinkles of brown fringing their edges.
The skeletal remains of
rejected grape clusters, stripped clean by crows, litter the vineyard turf.
We’ll
allow ourselves our moment of melancholy.
And
then we shift gears to next year, the bounty of future harvests, the rich
nectar now safely aging in winery tanks.
A
sign on a piece of aged barn wood in my backyard reads: to plant a garden is to
believe in tomorrow.
In
the vineyard it is perpetually tomorrow.
No
sooner are the last grapes plucked from the vines, than attention turns to next
year.
Furrows
are tilled.
Bird
netting rolled.
Nursery
orders placed.
Canada
geese, flying in a perfect wedge, migrate overhead. Their somber call dissipates
into the horizon.
On
these October days of fading goldenrod, something about the plaintive wail of
migrating birds makes me think that they understand what we ourselves have come
to know:
Each
tomorrow brings us closer to another golden season, a tomorrow in which we
dream of another bountiful harvest, dripping from the vines, in extravagant
jeweled tones.
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The bounty of our acres, on display at our harvest festival, September 2014. |