What you're seeing in the background of this next shot are the legs of a man in his 70's who'd just placed second at the senior Olympics in Vancouver, B.C. Pole vault, I believe. Rad, ain't it?
Z didn't feel well, so she didn't take to clamming like I'd hoped. She stayed close to me and didn't give a fig about the wriggly crabs and worms we unearthed. She wanted to nurse. So there we were, me at a squat, she latched onto my breast, standing in tiny shoes on the ocean bed floor, where hours before there had been enough water to cover us over and would soon be again. That's the kind of timeless, grounding, spiritual experience I like to see around here.
After a few hours of digging up clams, we took them home and made linguine. One of the boys played guitar while my aunt and uncle cooked. I baked bread. We all feasted. It was deeply satisfying to eat those clams in the warm light of a coastal town kitchen, with windblown hair and faces, and to talk about the best way to get the sand out of the clams beforehand, and how to prepare them. It reminded me again of how far removed from our food sources we are most of the time and of how much simple contentment we miss out on because of it. And of how easy it is to get back in touch!
4 comments:
If I was an octopus, I'd put up all 8 of my thumbs at the text and photos in this post.
love the legs...at his age they are better than anyone that I know and definitely my own!
what IS the best way to get the sand out?
Tamie - - well, thanks! Very great comment. Octopii. Clams. The ocean. Awesome.
Shana - - yeah, those legs were spectacular. Imagine having 8! If you were an octopus, you might. Do they actually have thumbs? I kind of doubt it. But I envision the ends of an octopus's leg like the end of an elephant's nose, and I believe an elephant has a thumb-like protrusion. Anyway.
Melissa - - I hear tell that you put the clams in cold water and sprinkle in corn starch, and leave them for some hours. The corn starch irritates them enough that they work at ejecting from themselves any foreign objects, including grains of sand. Evidently it makes them a little tougher, because they have been exercising instead of laying still just before you eat them.
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