Sunday, July 29, 2012

Grandfather's garden

I thought of making a collage with some pictures taken this summer in my grandfather's garden. Thus, you can see tomatoes in different stages of ripening. I can guarantee they are delicious. I picked some today while visiting my grandfather and ate with some sheep cheese.

 The plums are not yet riped. We gathered a bag anyway to make a compote. There are enough. My grandfather has all around his garden. He makes plum brandy (tuica) each year. He saves a part from each year's productions for eventual weddings in the family, a part goes to us, children and grandchildren and he has also enough left to sell. One of my uncles is in charge of distributing the latter one in the mountain town where he lives. I suppose people in that part don't have enough plum trees to prepare this alcohol. I know they have enough apple and pear trees, but maybe they want something different too.
This is a part of the garden. You can see: onions, garlic, peppers, tomatoes and maize.
This kind of maize is a recent addition to the garden. We don't usually bother to grow it because its only use is making brooms and they are not expensive. Bu this year, my mother decided that she wants to make some brooms herself, so here it is.

 Here is the end product. The classic maize broom. My mother tends to prefer these to the plastic ones. The chicken's prefer them too, they like pecking them.
Here is a favourite of my grandfather- the watermelons. He has his owns, but they are never enough and we buy a lot of them for him all summer. They make green mountains  in the cellar.



 The summer meals at my grandfather always happen under the traditional vine canopy. It makes the heat bearable and gives us a fair production of wine in the autumn. It seems we'll have enough wine this year.


 The garden includes also a small pond dug by my grandfather some twenty -something years ago. He took great pride in straightening its walls with river stones and bringing the water from the well into it through pipes. He is the only one in the village to have done this. He bought fish from a big dam in the area and he takes great care of them, spoiling them with bread or sweets. He doesn't fish them and doesn't let anyone else do it.
I and my cousins used to wait for him to leave with business and improvise fishing rods from sticks, thread and a bent needle.We tried to catch them luring them with polenta (mamaliga), without much luck. We knew about earth worms, but we were too squeamish to put them int he hook (city children, what do you want...). I remember one time, I actually succeeded to catch a fish, a bit larger than my palm, but I felt pity on it and put it in a pot with water. My aunt, who was home then, told them that it will die anyway if I throw it back in the pond, but I couldn't let it die put of water. When my grandfather came and he found the fish in the pond, I had to confess what I had done. Of course, I was scolded and if you are wandering what happened to the fish, it was thrown in the pond anyway. I think the others ate it. There was no point of cooking it, it was too small.
One of my uncles was more successful. He fished around two kilos and when grandpa returned, he pretended he had bough the fish from a shop.
I enjoy watching the fish swarm around the pond. You cans see them especially in the winter when the water is clear. But the pond houses also some very melodious frogs. They delight out ears with concerts every summer evening. In the breeding period, they even continue all day, which is very "delightful" especially when you are trying to take a nap at noon. It amuses me to listen to their different voices and try to match the baritone voiced with the large colourful males that jump from the shore when I get close to them.






  The pond is used also for watering the garden plants then the drought days. The various flowers around keep the garden beautiful, as not to mention the strawberries which I enjoy a lot. Unfortunately, this year was not a great year for strawberries.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Sendresti

Last weekend my family celebrated its patriarch's 90th birthday. As it happens for many years, we all gathered in the country for this - his six children with their wives and children. Some other relatives join us sometimes, delighted by the fun atmosphere.We all gather there in Șendrești, Bacau County, no matter where we leave now. It's a time of recollecting memories and sharing the news with the rest. The cake, barbecue, wine, jokes and dancing maintain everybody in a good mood. It's become kind of a tradition to gather the ones able and go for a walk in the woods.
The village is at the limit of a large forest; large enough to get lost several times while my uncles contradicted each other about the routes through it. The younger people have abandoned this distant village in favour of the town facilities, and the old generation dies one by one leaving the houses to be swallowed by the hungry forest. Thus if you are interested in emersing yourselves in the wild,untamed nature, this is the spot.
 
In some way, I am glad that this migration form rural to urban leaves this village, and the ones around, to be retaken by the forest. I am glad that nature wins somewhere. There are enough forests cut around the world. And this this forest really feels at home here. Foxes and predatory birds decimate the poultry of the remaining households, deers patrol its borders and packs of wild boars feast very often in the corn fields.
If you want to retreat in the middle of civilization, but so far from it, you should go there. The closest town is Podu Turculuihttp://goo.gl/maps/JEkO
Part of the road is with stones, which can be challenging for your car, but the views around are worth it. Not a lot of people know about what's ahead after you had the courage to go on that road, and maybe it's lucky, otherwise a lot of town people would invade with tents and grills the scenery.
But if you are really courageous, go! You don't need much. You will easily find people who will host you in their old house and feed with the best food they have. Company is greatly appreciated by old people when your children are away in some town and visit you rarely.
If you want some excitement you can join them in guarding the corn fields from the boars in the night, get lost in the forest or weed out some steep vineyard.

 

Friday, July 6, 2012

Various


A mountain village - I especially like the position of the church
The swan chicks all grown up
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Funny shapes on fields
A nineteenth century bridge (called Lady's bridge- because it was  build at the request of one of our queens) The scenery hasn't changed too much since then, the same carriage with horses is used
The only heir (a friend risked her neck climbing on some wooden stairs to  the barn attic to take this photo for me, knowing that it would delight me)
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I find these hay wheels very funny, they make me think of whewls of cheese rolled by giant mice. Obviously, I have a very vivid imagination...
Local beauties