This is an essay of the Autumn rituals that my grandfather instilled in me as a boy. |
Later this afternoon I took a walk out to a lone patch of tall hardwood timbered woods on my family’s property. It's pretty open in places and the trees are 50ft to 60ft tall and block out most of the light heading for the ground, so ground vegetation is thin to non- existent there. I walked around in this wonderland and absorbed the sights and sounds of the song birds. It is a place that I have longed to build an old long house style hewn hard wood log cabin. This is something I have wanted to do by hand the old fashioned way for a long time now. It would be my colonial style primitive home away from my normal house. A place to escape the REAL world for a while. Oil lamps, candles and the hearth would be the only light source at night. Old hand made hard wood furniture and a loft for sleeping quarters. There are no driveways or roads to this patch of woods, just farm fields around it. I need this to forget that the REAL world exists, just for a while. It would be a place where I could write my poetry and creative writing projects in total peace and solitude. I have camped in these woods a long time ago. The only noises I heard were the deer snorting at night, the occasional pack of pesky coyotes howling away in the distance, and the occasional sound of a great horned owl in the trees. Then the sweet melody of song birds in the day with squirrels scampering all over the forest floor burying their treasures only to forget where have of the treasures are by winter. I thought all this up after I sat down on a tree stump and smelled the smell that I consider to be more intoxicating than any other scent on Earth. It was just a glimmer of a whiff of the scent of damp hard woods mixed the smell of damp rotting leaves on the forest floor. This may sound strange to some people but to me it is the smell of my woods in Autumn. The sudden anticipated rush of hunting season invaded my senses and all the pursuits of being afield along with it. Bobwhite quail hunting, the heart pounding pursuit of ruffed grouse in dense cover, waiting for the right shot on the beautiful whitetail buck in front of me. Such days afield are hard to come by with the hassle of a full time job. When they come around though, I savor every last moment as if it were my last. You see it doesn't matter if I come home empty handed that day or not, it's being out there in the thick of the wilderness with a good friend and hunting buddy, knowing that in this short life, I'm making good memories that last. These memories are what holds me over till the next hunting season. Ah, the lingering perfume of damp hard woods in summer, the teasing scent of Fall. |