Welcome to my ramblings...


Come with me as I travel through the real places of my life and into the steep, switch-back roads of the imagination. Join me. You'll be good company and your thoughts are welcome.
Showing posts with label West Jefferson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West Jefferson. Show all posts

Friday, December 21, 2012

Red Fox in the Snow


The following is a story I imagined from this painting of a peaceful small village in the South of France after a rare snow. The painting is the creative work of Jane Johnson of West Jefferson, NC. We collaborated for an art exhibit called, "More than Words," at the Ashe Arts Center in September, 2012.


Painting by Jane Johnson of West Jefferson, NC

Red Fox in the Snow


Life changes and changes live. The frolicking vixen becomes a mother with five kits to feed. Call me Red. You know me.

close-up

Just last week in the South of France, the weather was dry, warm and luxurious, but this week brought the unexpected snow. Only yesterday, Lady Jeanne of the House worked outdoors gathering sticks and hauling off debris. One moment she worked under a bright blue sky as a light wind spread a fresh cool. The wind grew strong though and whipped the creaky trees. It howled louder by the hour with dark clouds building, and when it finally stopped, we were surrounded by a silent leaden stillness.

The snow started at nightfall, and by morning, we had a white new world. It has been such fun for my kittens, so new! I can hear the scratching of a mouse under the blanket right in front of me, a hardier kind of food for the family waiting now in the cold den. As this day ends and night returns, I will deliver the fresh meat and then return in cover of dark for the pomegranate.

My life has been a short eight years. Lady Jeanne is ninety but she may have more years left than I do. I am not afraid of her. She watches me through the window and sometimes leaves morsels on her doorstep like my favorite melon and tips of squashes and eggplant. I don’t think she minds sharing her pomegranates. It is a good thing because there is no camouflaging myself in this snow.

During spring and summer, I foraged for flowers that bloomed on the shrubs and the fruits that came after. Those were tasty, but since the apples of autumn, finding fruit is much harder. The long-lasting pomegranate here is a lucky find. The fruit remains on the branches into winter, drying and hardening, but inside there are juicy seeds with a lingering tang of late summer. Lady Jeanne knows I take one now and then. You can bet I’ve marked my territory.

The seasons affect changes within the pond too. Fish are delicious but hard to catch except in summer when the water is warm and minnows swim close to the bank. It is easier to catch frogs and big-eyed grasshoppers. Lizards and small snakes have completely disappeared in the cold.

How well the trees dress for the seasons. In spring they wear pastel pink buds and chartreuse leaves, and then for summer they change into deep verdant greens. By fall, they’re all wearing madras! In winter, a time when they bare most of their bark, ours are cloaked in mistletoe. Others don only a pearly broach of it. Today, they all wear robes of snow.

Weather is not too hard on the structures here, though there is some wearing of stone, rusting of metal and warping of wood over time. Lady Jeanne has seen more of that than I will ever see. She stores potatoes and carrots in a root cellar, and she is a foxy lady. I can’t dig into it. The walls are too thick.

Soon after the ides of winter, a funny little boy comes to visit Lady Jeanne. Any day, he will arrive again with the others, and then I will bring all my kits and we will watch them in the warm house through the windows. Their gifts will be more than food, but late at night, I expect there will be delicious morsels we have never tasted left for us on the doorstep. For this it is hard to wait.

 Diana Renfro, 2012
close-up

Monday, March 12, 2012

Collage of Ashe County


Ashe county legends
here to be told
So many painted
Too many sold

Christmas tree orchards
on hills in straight lines
Barns full of 'bacca
Old ways in decline

New River canoeing
Tubing in drought
Slick salamanders
Fly-fishing  trout

Three top and Phoenix
Blankets of snow
Blazing warm bonfires
Pot-bellied stoves

Country ham biscuits
Bright quilted barns
Pileated woodpeckers
Blueberry farms

Bucks heavy-headed
Lumbering bear
Red foxes hiding
Bobcats beware

Chinquapins, buckeyes
Lightning-rod locusts
Walnuts and hickories
Acorns from oaks

Goats eating roses
Lambs nibbling grass
Cows grazing pastures
Mules growing fat

Rabbits in lettuces
Groundhogs in beans
Deer tasting flowers
drinking from springs

Farmers at market
Neighbors who share
Healing Springs water
Fresh apples and pears

Guinea hens ticking
Moths round a light
Fireflies at gloaming
A clear starry night

Trucks kicking gravel
Dogs splashing mud
Broom straw on hillsides
Dry spells with dust

Banjos and fiddles
Fine hand-made guitars
Singing and picking
In old country stores

Kingfishers, herons
Hawks soaring bold
Bluebirds and hummers
Finches of gold

Amphibolite Mountains
Dozens of creeks
Hand-woven baskets
Wild raspberry picks

Bikers in summer
Christmas in July
Goldenrod autumns
Hiking up high

Pig pickin' parties
Artist salons
Book lovers' festivals
Gallery crawls

Wide sprawling cornfields
Pumpkins and gourds
Tall wieldy scarecrows
Indian lore

Bogs, frogs and turtles
Cedars that sway
Churches with frescoes
Fields of rolled hay

East and West Jefferson
Crafts and fine art
Friendly small businesses
Communities apart

Horses in meadows
Black snake on a fence
Sweet mountain laurel
Rhododendron and mint

Blackheart cherries
Lichen on logs
Glossy red Fire Pinks
Blue Ridge in fog

Ashe county seasons
Storm to rainbow
Plenty of reasons
Lucky to know.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Food For Thought


Thursday, December 01, 2011


It's a brisk, snowy night in Grassy Creek and I have cilantro growing happily in the breeze  on the front porch railing. How low can it go? The world appears a whitened conglomerate of all we saw here yesterday. My antiquarian husband happily plans the layout and décor for a new condo in the city. Just dreaming?

I've learned that our Christmas rendezvous will be cut short again this year by the NBA, which finally reached a collective bargaining agreement. I'm glad Caroline has the fun job of Arena Host for the Bobcats, but it's hard to like professional basketball right now and I was looking forward to her unrushed Christmas visit.

After Thanksgiving and looking toward Christmas, food is on my mind, particularly the scarcity of it in families who don't have work. Did you ever worry about owners of professional sports teams or their players not having enough food while they weren't working? I didn't. But growing consistently in this affluent sports enriched country is the  number of children who don't have enough to eat .

In Ashe County, one out of four children, lives below the poverty level.

I write because I don't have the gift of gab. My sister-in-law, Ruth, does and that makes us a good team. We had the good fortune of helping with the Community Meal in West Jefferson on Saturday and I know it won't be the last time. She talked to all who came and knows many by name now while I thought about what to write. We worked with several other volunteers to put out a great meal, both satisfying and fun.

There are too many who need healthy food and a warm place to eat it. That thought converted to action will help. It's not even hard.


Ashe Outreach Ministries