Friday, April 08, 2016

Friday Ramble - The Sweetest Alchemy

This remains one of my favorite intervals in the whole turning year - the cold sunny days in springtime when the north gears up for the maple syrup season.  The Lanark woods are full of sugar bird (saw-whet owl) songs, clouds of white smoke rise from sugar shacks tucked among the old maples, the fragrance of boiling sap is everywhere. The sylvan alchemy at work in the woods in late March and early April is wild and sweet, and the homely metaphor of the cauldron or pot has profound resonance for me.

I still have the battered Dutch oven I carried while wandering and camping across this continent years ago, stirring soups, potions and stews by starlight and watching as sparks went spiraling into the inky sky over the rim of my old pot.  The tiny motes of light rising into the night sky from its depths were stars too, perfect counterpoint to the constellations dancing over my head. 

These days, there's the stockpot bubbling away on my stove, a rice cooker, bean crock and unglazed earthenware tagine, the small three-legged iron incense bowl sitting on a table in the study. In late March and early April, there are the farms and sugar camps of friends in the Lanark Highlands, miles of collecting hose in confetti colors strung from maple to maple, evaporators sending fragrant plumes into the air, tin sap pails fixed to trees, antique syrup cauldrons boiling over open fires to demonstrate how maple syrup was made in centuries past.
 
The word cauldron comes from the Middle English cauderon, thence from the Anglo-Norman caudiere and the Latin caldāria, the latter meaning “cooking pot” and rooted in the adjective calidus meaning warm or “suitable for warming”. At the end of the trail is the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) root kelə meaning simply “warm”.  Calendar, calorie, chafe, chiaroscuro, claim, clamor, class, clear, council, hale, haul and lee are kin. So is caldera, a term used by geologists to describe the massive crater formed when a volcano's magma chamber is emptied by a titanic eruption or the chamber's roof collapses. The largest volcanic caldera on earth is the vast Yellowstone Caldera in northern Wyoming, also the biggest supervolcano of them all and still active.

The night that gifts us with stars and enfolds us gently when the sun goes down is a vast cauldron or bowl.  Somewhere in the darkness up there, Cerridwen is stirring up a heady cosmic brew of knowledge, creativity and rebirth, her magical kettle simmering over a mystic cook fire. From her vessel, the bard Taliesin once partook of a single drop and awakened into wisdom and song.

We're all vessels, and one of the best motifs for this life is surely a pot or cauldron, one battered, dented and well traveled, but useful and happy to be so, bubbling and crackling away in the background (sometimes in the foreground), making happy musics and occasionally sending bright motes up into the air.

... and so it is with this old hen when her favorite wild places begin to awaken. Notions of alchemy bubble away gently; sparks fly upward, images of pots and cauldrons cosmic and domestic whirl about in her thoughts. She simply could not (and would not) be anywhere else.

3 comments:

Tabor said...

Ah, and I read something about maple syrup having certain things that are especially good for your health!

Guy said...

A lovely seasonal post.

Guy

sarah said...

It all sounds so very lovely.