Early yesterday morning I harvested the first two figs of the season. They tasted fabulous. I might have written a poem about them, but then I discovered someone else had beaten me to it... after lunch, I found this poem, First Fig, by Allison Elrod...
The fig tree has spread its generous
canopy across my late summer side yard.
Its branches are heavy with fruit.
and fuller; they are taking the rain
and the warmth
of a hundred summer days
and making them over into pleasure;
taut green skin and soft pink flesh.
Wearing only my nightgown
and my work boots,
I have come outside at dawn
like some post-modern Eve,
yearning for a taste of the fruit of the tree.
I reach up into the branches,
reach up for the fruit
that hangs just beyond my reach,
the fig whose skin is just beginning
to bear the flush of readiness.
Maybe I am Eve. After all,
isn’t the light in my garden
still what came of
"Let there be light?"
And isn’t everything to come
in human history beginning
on this very day,
this very morning,
when this very fig—the one I am holding in my hand—is finally ripe?
Or maybe, I am
a middle-aged woman outside
in my nightgown at six a.m.—
filled with happiness so pure it feels
like innocence—savouring the sweetness
of summer’s first ripe fig
before the light shifts,
before history resumes,
before I come inside to wake you,
temptation on my mind.
To be strictly accurate, I ought to admit that I was in the shower, when I suddenly remembered I needed to check my figs, and I really couldn't wait. I wrapped myself in a large bath towel, slipped on my sandals, and ran out into the back garden. I was wearing only slightly more clothes than Eve [It's OK, our neighbours are away at the moment, nobody could see me]
I have a book called 'gardening in pyjamas'. Maybe it's time for a book called 'gardening in nearly nothing at all'! 🤣 Figs for breakfast?
ReplyDeleteFresh fruit at breakfast is lovely!
DeleteIt's a good job figs are summer fruits. Imagine if they ripened after the first frost, and you returned indoors looking like an icicle!
ReplyDeleteThis is very true. I think I would send Bob out to harvest them instead
DeleteThankfully the wasps seem to have given up on my figs as I've been eating one or two a day for the last couple of weeks.
ReplyDeleteYour post got me wondering if there is a poem about absolutely everything out there somewhere!
If there is a forgotten topic, I'm sure Bryan Bilston will write one for us
DeleteI adore figs yum. Eve in a bath towel now there's a title for a poem. Regards Sue H
ReplyDelete🤣
DeleteI'm enjoying them too. Last night I baked them with some Parma ham until it was crispy.
ReplyDeleteYum!
DeleteFresh figs are so delicious! My friend used to have an allotment with two large fig trees and they always produced so many we were given lots. Unfortunately she had to give up her allotment, the trees are still there and we walk past them to get to our plot but regrettably no longer get given any.
ReplyDeleteI was out watering the garden and topping up the bird feeders in my nightdress this morning!
That does sound like the bird feeders are in your nightdress 🤣
DeleteAnd did you go back indoors with temptation on your mind??!! Lol
ReplyDeleteWell.....
DeleteLol x
DeleteWe have a small fig tree in the new place, I do hope it will get a fig or two in the next few years.
ReplyDeleteLovely poem
Alison in Devon x
I was told "4years till first fruits" when I got mine, and that was true. It didn't like being moved outside, but reporting and resiting it last year has obviously been the right thing, plus feeding it . I hope you have a good harvest in due course
DeleteWe used to have fig trees in France, laden with fruit. I'm not keen but I think M would have happily lain under the tree and eaten everything!
ReplyDeleteBob is not keen, but I eat them happily.
DeleteAlan ate the first fig off his tree yesterday ... but he had his clothes on when he picked it. ;-)
ReplyDelete😉
DeleteI was pegging my washing out in my shortie pyjamas this morning, and if the neighbours can see me, tough! Glad your figs are fruiting at long last, although not my favourite fruit. Xx
ReplyDelete😉
DeleteDid you share the fig harvest? I like figs but sadly they don’t agree with my stomach. Catriona
ReplyDeleteBob doesnt really like them - so I had two yesterday and one today!
DeleteEnjoy your figs! :)
ReplyDelete👍
DeleteHow lovely to have fresh figs! We are out in the country and I don't have to get out of my nightie and housecoat to hang laundry, unless, as recently, a team of guys are replacing the garage roof close by!
ReplyDelete😂
DeleteI'm always in the garden in my nightie!!!
ReplyDeleteExcept when you're in Whovian cosplay outfits 🤣
DeleteAlso crossed my mind to add this when I commented. I always wonder if I have any audience wondering what on earth...
DeleteI don't think I have ever had a fresh fig. I hope you enjoyed them?
ReplyDeleteThey are very different from dried figs in texture and flavour. Like the difference between fresh cherries and dried glacé cherries 🍒
DeleteThey are DELICIOUS! I don't like dried ones but fresh are amazing. If only my tree would actually grow them properly!
DeleteIs your tree in the ground or in a pot? If it is in a pot, consider repotting in a slightly larger one, and moving it to a sunnier area in the garden.
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