There is nothing like
eating fruit picked from the tree. I have always felt that way, regardless of
the potential wormholes and wasp bites on the fruit. I was happy to find I'm
not the only one.
For example, there's
my friend who lives in Guadalajara. He
was the fruit he had for breakfast -- mango, apples,"tuna" from
cactus, oranges, plums, and all kinds of wonderful fruits. At first I thought that
he had purchased them in the town near his "rancho" near Guadalajara,
Mexico. But, he said he picked them himself -- that several years ago he put in
a little orchard, and that for him, there is no greater pleasure than strolling
through it in the morning and picking fruit that is still wet with dew.
My parents had fruit
trees, and I loved eating cherries, peaches, apples, pears, and persimmons.
But, hands down, the fruit I like to eat most from the tree is grapefruit. What
I like about grapefruit is that it's such a random thing; you never know what
you'll get. The fruit can be really sweet, or really bitter, or somewhere in
between, and you can never tell by its color, size, or even firmness.
The first time I
picked a grapefruit was on New Year's Eve when I was 15 years old. I was in Palm Springs, California,
accompanying my dad on a trip. He was the head of a contract mining company,
and one of the companies, Atajo Mining (short cut mining!), was not performing,
and he was going to have to enter in some rather difficult conversations. He
had told me all about it as we drove across the desert from Phoenix to Palm
Springs.
While he was in
negotiations, I was riding bicycles and horses at locations near the hotel
where we were staying. Nothing was going as planned. I was seriously
saddle-sore from riding a horse for 4 hours instead of the 1 hour, and I felt
very alone. It was late afternoon and I had a few hours to kill before my dad
came back to the hotel to go to a New Year's Eve celebration. I decided to sit
outside, relax, and read a book. My room was perfect for it, because it had a
small patio shaded by a grapefruit tree that was bursting with bright yellow
fruit, and many felt soft and ripe to the touch. I picked two grapefruits and tried them. They
were wonderfully bitter (I love bitter things), as was the time itself or
perhaps, let's say, bittersweet...
But, that's another
story and one I'll save for another time. Another story would be based on the
saying that fruit never falls far from the tree where it grew, referring to
characteristics of a child and his or her parent. That's a saying that fills me
with angst and dread, but again that's another story.
In the meantime,
every time I think of a grapefruit tree, I think of that amazing time with my
dad, who, interestingly enough, sends me off with a small bag of grapefruits
each time I see him.
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