It Rained!

After a day of rain we awoke to cool breezes and cloud. Everywhere we went yesterday people were quietly enjoying the rain. There were no complaints, just a sense of shared relief.

We went to Quaker meeting for the first time in quite a while yesterday. We all sat in silence for most of the hour, the rain on the roof the only sound. At one point a member rose and urged us to act in the world; he reminded us that Friends have always stood against tyranny and harm. Looking around the room I was reminded that we are an aging group, and I wonder what will become of the meeting if we are unable to add younger members.

Here on the coast the foliage is still predominantly green but reds and yellows are definitely gaining. I imagine the chill of the past couple of weeks has begun to influence the leaf change and the brief rains have reduced the browning and dropping; the landscape no longer looks parched but the gardens are pretty much done.

We have been visiting local orchards and enjoying the bounty of the harvest. We are probably getting near the end of the peach season. It seems to me that this year we have had peaches for an extended time and they have been exquisitely tasty. This morning we enjoyed peach pie and yogurt for breakfast, relishing the results of someone else’s labours.

Saturday morning we went to a nearby Apple and Peach Festival. The community in which it is held is an old farming community, famous for its orchards. Like many rural communities, it is economically stressed and supported the president in last year’s elections. The farmers are aging and the kids don’t want to farm., so orchards are being replaced by houses. There is a sense of sadness and loss amongst the older residents.

Driving through the rural landscape we could easily have been in rural Vermont or upstate New York. The people are friendly and concerned about the fate of their communities. They share a sense that they have been forgotten, or abandoned, by politicians and those with advanced educations and relative wealth.

The festival is small and distinctly local, and I was reminded of events in my rural Illinois childhood and my young adult ranching days. Everything from the music on stage to the peach cobbler was homespun, most folks seemed to know each other.

There is something broadly warming about knowing the kids raising the winning cows at the fair, or when the rodeo clowns are your neighbours. There is an ease to sitting with friends and neighbours, surrounded by a familiar landscape, repeating traditions that your grandparents participated in.

For some reason, attending the festival I was reminded of the village I lived in as a child in rural Lincolnshire, England. From the village it was usually easier to get to the market town, Boston, than to the neighbouring villages. Perhaps the isolation contributed to the strong sense of community. Certainly the fact that most of the men in the village had been killed in the war was a factor

Ancient, hedgerow-lined trails connected villages so that the next village was a relatively short walk instead of a long drive. Sometimes life could feel way to cloistered in isolated communities, and I was told that many romances and conceptions took place in those sheltered passageways. Soon after we moved away many of the hedgerows were destroyed to enlarge fields, people began to own autos, and the isolation gave way to inclusion in a vastly changed world.


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16 responses to “It Rained!”

  1. We share the same impressions. Your writing of Lincolnshire brought back the early days f my life when I visited my mother’s family who lived in a small village in Wiltshire. I didn’t know to appreciate it then but I am glad for the memories.

    1. I was only 7 when we left but I have carried warm memories through a lifetime. I visited the village several years ago and found it still to be friendly and beautiful. A colleague from the BBC once sat with me and helped me understand what I had experienced. I shall always be grateful to her.

      I have never been to Wiltshire. What is/was it like?

  2. The mention of rural communities, fading traditions, generations etc reminded me of the book that I’ve just started, A Glisk of Sun, which features writing by another now deceased Orkney writer, Bessie Skea. (Mackay Brown championed her, which was how I first encountered her name.)

    1. Thanks, Andy. SO much to read! I’ll look for it.

  3. Thank you for your reflections, Michael. Such a different way of living to my urban life on the other side of the world in the middle of a big city in Sydney, Australia. Fresh peaches. Yum.

    1. Hi Libby,
      Yes, very different. We live at the intersection of rural and urban; the port of New Bedford is literally a couple of miles away, with Boston and Providence being close by. Our town, and adjacent towns, are trying very hard to keep this marvellous intersection in tact.

  4. This is such a bittersweet, insightful, thought-provoking post that makes me feel simultaneously nostalgic and concerned. But thankful for the rain you received.

    1. It is complex for sure. I was filled with nostalgia as I wrote; always concern stands nearby. We shall see how how things evolve. It seems important to remain engaged and hopeful, as so much can change in ways we least expect.

  5. We got almost 2″ of welcome rain, and we are grateful too. Your Quaker meeting sounds quite special. It reminded me of the wonderful Granges that were located around my area but that have now closed because of lack of a younger interested population. Sad.

    1. Our local granges seem to be alive and well, and we attend events there. Somehow our local farm communities remain vibrant and local towns encourage that. Most farms have been family owned for generations and are truly family farms. Still, everyone acknowledges that farming is a very fragile, vulnerable enterprise.

  6. I grew up in a small rural town in Maine—well, most of Maine is rural— that had many similarities to where you grew up. This was the 1960s, when most families only had one car. Less traffic, more walking and biking. I wonder if that’s why few of us were obese even though we didn’t stint on sugar or fat.

    Peaches are still not common in Maine, and I am envious of the availability of local peaches in your area. How I love them!

    1. Yes, we walked or biked everywhere. Bad teeth but healthy bones and weight….
      I think we re at the edge of real peach growing temps, even with climate change. We are told we can grow figs but between the deer and the cold we have not yet had fruit. Still, it seems we are at the time when peaches only last a couple of days so one has to use them quickly.

      I do wish we could share peaches with you!

  7. We are in about the same state here, Michael. I made peach pies and pumpkin bread last week. We are about ready for apple pie, now.

    1. I am addicted to pie, always have been. The drought seems to be impacting the fruit harvest throughout New England. Still, this year seems to be unusually blessed with unbelievably delicious fruit. Yes, we aree beginning to see the apples, in many varieties, take over the orchards.

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