Recently, my wife and I visited a U-pick blueberry farm in the upper Hood River Valley. Mourning doves crooned in the surrounding forest. A smear of clouds waltzed across the summer’s sky. We expected our son and granddaughter to join us. Acres of mature bushes, loaded with ripe fruit, beckoned.
The farm is located on Dee Flats, near our old stomping grounds adjacent to the Mt. Hood National Forest. This plateau of volcanic rock is noted for the depth of its topsoil. Fruit orchards prosper in the fertile sediment deposited over time by winds that scour the Lost Lake Canyon.
We live in town now, 15 miles downriver, but for over 35 years had a small house within a mile of the berry patch. In years past, I ran the roads of this plateau to alleviate the stress of work and parenting. Later, when recovering from a stem cell transplant for my cancer, multiple myeloma, I recuperated with daily walks around the cultivated blocks of pear orchards. Often, my youngest son and his goofy dogs accompanied me on the circuit of farms.
This visit to the former neighborhood evoked memories of family history. It was here that we sank roots deep into a mountain community and made a small Oregon town our home. One son, Noah, has moved away, yet it was he who pined most for the homestead of his youth when we sold the house.
The other son, Isaac, the aforementioned youngest, chose to remain in the valley. His family resides close to Dee, along the east fork of the Hood River. Within moments of he and Savannah joining us, blue streaks from the irresitible fruit colored her cheeks.
Our buckets filled quickly. Soon, 43 pounds tipped the scales at the pay station. So too, my heart felt the sweet weight of reminiscence on what we’ve known together: the joys, the hopes, love and pain, the investment into and profit from nurturing, the confidence instilled, the fear and missteps, the forgiveness, and, most of all, the shared trust for the journey, not the destination.
Savannah gobbled the berries like a famished bear cub. Uncertainties lay ahead for her as they do for any child. And, given my age, I can never know what solutions she will choose. Yet, I am consoled. She has excellent guides.
Before leaving, we posed for photos in the morning light. Doves continued their serenade. More pickers arrived carrying bags and buckets. Though it’s risky to predict the future, I think it likely that the winter of 2016 -2017 will be blessed with blueberries for our pancakes.
Tagged: blueberries, cancer, family, Hood River, Hood River Valley, Marilyn, multiple myeloma, nature, parenting, stem cell transplant, writing