Wednesday, April 27, 2016

on coming home



I didn’t think much about it before I did it, but I bet the unconscious, bedrock of me did, and waited patiently as only bedrock can do.  Waiting for me to realize that I needed to be back home. Allegheny home. I had been wandering, ungroundedly for a few decades.

Most of that time was spent giving the Ozarks a try on … having to give the Ozarks a try on and they never became comfortable. Too  dry and scraggly in the summers, for one thing, when I was used to drippy mosses, hillsides that seep water from every pore and sometimes a quick, sharp cloudburst at 3:15 every afternoon. Besides that, the Ozark rocks were angular, had square corners and arranged themselves into stoic shelves, whereas the creeks of the eastern uplands draped themselves into soft contours that were sensual and sparkled with bling; (surely the work of the Fae) glittering with specs of ground mica and swaths of pink seed garnets. This was obviously and comfortably  a feminine landscape. 


On the last drive east,  with our extremely culled down possessions (but keeping my motorcycle) I watched as the geology changed the flora at the eastern edge of the Cumberland Plateau. Poplars and hemlocks started appearing and I shivered, as my life had always been defined by the plants around me. Here, now, I was seeing childhood companions. 

At age 11 I found myself so smitten with the fragrant wild plum at the edge of our woods that I asked my dad to help me make some incense from the blossoms. 
Once on one of my evening rambles  I came  across some anise goldenrod (as opposed to goldenrod goldenrod) and at age 15, it held enough significance for me to remember precisely  the details, 45 years later. We moved away when I was 16 but I got another chance to resume the dialog with my first of kin when I went away to college in the mountains of North Carolina. For the next 6 years the Smokies became my more significant other, especially the years I lived next to the park in an attempt to homestead in a tarpaper covered cabin... where sometimes baby salamanders would come out the kitchen faucet and I would walk them back up to the spring.

Aaron Copland knew exactly what he was doing when he chose “Appalachia” to exemplify “Spring”  as both spring and his symphony  start out with a moving from stillness, into a startling aliveness.  They gather momentum as temperatures rise and the mountains release water and soon mists and fogs rise and swirl and coalesce  into delirious birdsong.  A million shades of green march up the slopes, week by week (the poplars as brush strokes) and the climax must surely be when the flanks explode into sheets of wildflowers that go for … m i l e s.


And now I am home. And now it is spring. And that pair of wings in my chest open up and float on updrafts of GLEE, the spirit plants within wear shit-eating grins and tears stream down all our cheeks.


Aaron Copland's Appalachian Spring
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4E1JYP5Tgc

photo credit Wyndhamtrips


Saturday, April 16, 2016

a man and his moon gate



Jay has been working hard, carving our new garden from scratch and visions. Radiating out in concentric circles from Urnnie, (the center of our universe) beds are mulched and ever so slowly accepting new residents. Seedlings straggle up in the raw clay-minded dirt which has been amended with dried cow pats from the old Jeb farm. We water from rain barrels and do anti-deer dances; so far so good, one day at a time. Come see Lilac Corner 5 years down the road!



Saturday, February 13, 2016

Appreciating Ayala Moriel



Smelly friends make the best friends. I have been lucky in that I have so many, sprinkled around the globe, to do swaps with. Lately I received a slim package in my mailbox from Ayala MorielThat Ayala is a highly esteemed perfumer is no secret. She also has a talented hand at incense, another fragrant pursuit she has had perhaps as long as or longer, than perfume.

Her recent perfume release; Komorebi (roughly translated from the Japanese as the shimmering, dappled light in a very much alive forest) was a revelation to me. It seemed to encompass something much larger than a ‘perfume’ and grew on my skin into … a whole forest. The towering ancients were there as well as the supporting cast of the understory and I was having the forest experience! The vial went missing for a while and evidently made a reappearance in my husband’s keep. Which is fine with me as I still get to enjoy it.

To be so masterful with fragrance materials readily transfers to incense. Her vetiver  Kyphi was INCREDIBLE. At some point in her life she had to have been a ‘ladybug’ on the wall when the ancient Egyptian priests were formulating in their temples. The vetiver component weaves it's own melody through the song with a voice so smooth you would think vetiver is indigenous to Egypt (which I don't think it is; Doesn't Matter.) and a favorite of said priests.   I will be hoarding and eking this one out for a long long time.



Other incense blends to fall into my lap were cones, each one in a slightly different shape and size which clearly marks them as Hand Made, which is to me the highest compliment to bestow. They are layered and complex as beautifully as her perfumes. It’s futile to choose a favorite out of ‘Sweet Tobacco’, “Chypre Birds”, ‘Song of Songs’ and the Agarwood; they are all perfect for different moods and I break a tiny piece off to heat as I gave up the habit of actual burning incense; heating them releases the scents without scorching.

Now I have put myself in a mood to go do some listening. : )

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Enfleurage; the poetic form of capturing fragrance.





The practice of enfleurage (a French term for a fragrance extraction method used in perfumery) is in itself pure poetry. The flowers and their fragrances, the gentle slow way of picking them and layering them into the frames... all speak the language of beauty and grace. I feel captured myself. 

Lilac Corner is holding another course, to start February 6th.
Contact Dabney at scent@dabney-rose.com to get more information.
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