The Odor Of Sanctity

Summer                                    Waxing Grandchildren Moon

Have you ever smelled fresh bees wax?  A smell that takes you right to the essence of the natural world.  It exudes a sense of well-being, freshness, vitality.  I harvested some honey today for the Woolly meal on Monday night.  The honey and the honey comb offer that same sensation; perhaps, as latter day Catholics might have said, it is the odor of sanctity.

The experience this morning took me back to two other smell, for me equally enmeshed with the natural world as our obvious home.  The first one, of the longest standing for me, I experience in the  produce cooler at Cox’s Supermarket when I worked there as a boy.  This smell combined apple scents, oranges, bananas, lettuce, watermelon, whatever was in season into a perfume that drew me back often.  I would sneak away from stocking shelves or breaking down boxes, push the plunger that opened the door, step inside and be transported to paradise, a place where everything suggested abundance, nourishment and fine flavor.

Another one of these scents came to me only this year as I harvested parsnips.  Lifting the tapered white parsnip out of the ground, I brought its roots, only just holding the parsnip in its intimate relationship with the soil, to my nose.  Ah.  Again, freshness, vitality, well-being.  It was as if, for a moment, I inhabited the parsnip’s underground world, the place where it truly lived.  There, with the scent, I could trace the connections between the parsnip and its source of nutrients in the soil around it; I could feel the back and forth of vegetable and soil as they interacted in a dance older than the oil beneath the Gulf, older than the iron ore on the range.

Yes, as I think of it, the odor of sanctity is it, exactly.  The sacred blossoms into molecules that excite this oldest sense, the one that relates us most closely to the rest of our animal brothers and sisters.  The sacred emerges from the sophisticated work of the honey bee turning nectar into honey.  The sacred emerges from the fruits of the earth as they await transport to our tables.  The sacred emerges within the top layers of  soil, that thin web of living things that supports the plants from which we all take our sustenance.  Yes, the sacred emerges in these places, and it sends out an aroma to draw attention to itself.

Bee Diary: July 17, 2010

Summer                                    Waxing Grandchildren Moon

Hive inspections today focused on the need for additional honey supers.  The package colony had the third hive box about 80% drawn out with honey and brood, so I stuck a honey super on it.  The divide has two hive boxes.  As Dave suggested when he came out a week ago Tuesday, I had left the queen excluder off.  I put it back on today, carefully checking both honey supers to see if the queen had gone up into them.  She hadn’t.  At least I don’t think so.  She has a mark and I didn’t see one on any of the bees, but I did see a large, unusual looking darker backed bee.  Sort a bee goliath.  Probably a drone.  The divide bees have not done much in the two empty supers, so we’ll have to see.  I may stick a frame from a parent colony super in one of the divide’s supers.

The parent colony has done a good bit of work.  One honey super filled up a while ago.  The second one I put on with it has begun to take on weight.  The other two have a good bit of drawn comb, but not much weight yet.  A filled honey super weighs around 50 pounds, plenty for this guy to lift.

I did take one full frame out of the honey super already filled and replaced it with an empty one.  The full frame will be part of the Woolly meal on Monday night.  Just what we’ll use it for is not yet decided.

Home Again

Summer                                           Waxing Grandchildren Moon

The grandkids have returned home to Denver.  Their parents only have a couple of weeks now before they return to their teaching jobs, Jon in elementary art and Jen in EFL elementary work in an experimental school.  Ruth and Gabe will return to child care at Humphrey’s, across the street from their house.  Ruth will only be there two weeks because she starts pre-school this year.  Watch out pre-school.

(Denver at night from space)

Gotta go.  The weather’s reasonable and the bees need attention.  See you on the backside of the hive inspections.