Lately I’ve been grounding myself in my rural Georgia blessings by rereading Gladys Taber‘s books about her life on her farm, Stillmeadow, in the hills of Connecticut. Every sentence she writes, it seems, takes me to comforting places that fill me with the joy of memories and the inspiration to carry on the traditions and legacy that my mother left.
In the August chapter of Stillmeadow Calendar A Countrywoman’s Journal, Gladys shares, “Corn stands silken in the field, chicory stars the roadside, and goldenrod mints her coin. The kitchen smells of spices and syrups, ming and sweet pepper. It is the time of “putting up,” a rewarding time for country-folk. I believe it is an instinct in man to store things against the winter, even when there is a supermarket a few blocks or miles away. It is part of the rhythm of life.”
When my children were young, I’d meet my mother at the halfway point so that the kids could visit a week every summer with their grandparents. Just a few weeks ago, as I was visiting one of my girls, we passed a Dairy Queen.
“That makes me think of all those times Mimi would take us to get a Cotton Candy Blizzard,” she shared. “Those were the best days of my life. I loved making strawberry pigs with Mimi.”
My mother had a fig tree, and they’d all go out and pick figs in the back yard and strawberries from a neighbor’s patch. Mom would get out the pressure cooker and a box of clean Mason jars and lids. Everyone had a job to do well beyond the picking – – washing figs, hulling strawberries, slicing fruits, measuring sugar, stirring. It was a day-long event with everyone fully-aproned, and they stocked our pantry and theirs with all the toast topping they needed for the coming winter months.
My grown children still call strawberry figs “strawberry pigs,” from their days of childhood mispronunciations.
When we moved onto the Johnson Funny Farm in 2008, I found a little twig of a scratch-and-dent turkey fig on the clearance rack at Home Depot and bought it for $3.00. My husband put up the orange plastic netting around it to keep from running the tractor over it, and today it stands taller than a clown on stilts and is more solid than any prize bull.
I walk out to the fig tree this morning, inspecting the forthcoming fruits, anticipating their ripening. A fig harvest heralds the end of summer and beginning of fall – my favorite time of year! And I feel my mother’s arm around my shoulders, erasing all distance between heaven and earth, assuring me that the time spent doing simple things with those we love is the best gift of all. The simple act of making memories transcends years, space, and distance and preserves the togetherness and belonging – – the “putting up” of love scooped and slathered freely like a medicinal balm at the twist of a jar lid when it’s needed in the winters of our lives.





So many memories woven into this post! Harvesting offers strong sensory images, and you’ve captured many of them.
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WOW. You weaved such a rich slice here. I love how oyu started with a story from long ago that you still connect with. Then to your memory of canning. Then to you now awaiting the ripen figs. So glad you included photos, too. Thanks for taking me on a warm and loving journey with your words.
A favorite line: “time spent doing simple things with those we love is the best gift of all.”
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“Taller than a clown on stilts and more solid than a prize bull,” not bad for a “scratch and dent” from the clearance rack. There’s so much here that’s out of my experience – we never “put up” for winter with my New York whiskey-drinking grandma, and I’ve never seen a turkey fig, but we do roast and freeze a lot of tomatoes at the end of summer. I do love the way your language gets richer and more colorful as you travel back into the memories.
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Kim,
I’ve never heard of strawberry fig jan, but it sounds amazing. Will you be making some w/ your figs? Your mom is right about the best pleasures, and I love that you rescued and have nurtured that tree. It’s lovely. I’ve been scouring for jam recipes I can make in my instant pot. I do t know if that will happen this year, but your slice today has me extra motivated. I hope you also write a poem featuring strawberry pigs.
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Your title just caught me, and like the other readers I enjoyed your voyage that took you to these memories. This (your last) sentence is so beautiful and so, so resonant with me:
“The simple act of making memories transcends years, space, and distance and preserves the togetherness and belonging – – the “putting up” of love scooped and slathered freely like a medicinal balm at the twist of a jar lid when it’s needed in the winters of our lives.”
It solidifies my desire to create memories with my grandchildren, now, that will remind them that I love them even when we rarely see each other and after I am gone. And hopefully some of those memories will be a balm for my own children as well, when they endure trying times.
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Oh, Kim, I love the stories you tell here. Your writing is beautiful. That metaphor of the strawberry figs to life is stunning:
“the ‘putting up’ of love scooped and slathered freely like a medicinal balm at the twist of a jar lid when it’s needed in the winters of our lives.”
I’ve never heard of strawberry figs before reading about them here.
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