I know
everyone has noticed and even bee affected by the layer of ice covering, well,
everything. For me it means shuffeling
across the untouched lawn to the stomach dropping cadence of shuffle shuffle
slipcrackcrunch.
Shuffle shuffle
slipcrackcrunch.
And that’s
only on the steps my feet actually make an impression on.
But I am
here on this hand seizing, lamp-lit night with a purpose: Identification.
With the
National Wildlife Federation’s Field
Guide to Trees of North America in hand I face the frozen garden. To be fair, I cheated. My roommate, a Biology student with a
preference for plants and bugs, pointed me in the right direction earlier in
the week by listing a few of the plants.
I stopped listening once she mentioned witch hazel.
Witch hazel. How could I not have noticed the witch hazel?
My
relationship with witch hazel has been rather muggy over the years. The first bursts of yellow nearly blended in
with the siding at the front of my house.
But they were there, stealing the sun out of the sky to turn into
flowers. Stealing summer to replace it
with fall. Exchanging my freedom for a
structured school week.
My roommate
didn’t tell me which corner each plant resided in, but with the field guide,
and my memory, finding the witch hazel was simple enough. Three plants caught in the middle of shrub
and tree stand proudly in the back corner of the garden. They were not planted here out of
coincidence, but because witch hazel prefers the shade and this portion of the
garden is continually overcast by the towering brick wall.
These
shrub-trees are not the frozen skeletons I see in the distance. Their limbs are malleable, and covered in
soft mustard brown polyps. The field
guide shows me an example of immature capsules, but these look more like
bouquets of bean sprouts. These are the
opposite of immature capsules. This is
what’s left behind when the last of the spidery flowers have fallen. Because this is witch hazel’s autumn. While the trees in the distance have long
been sleeping these shrub-trees are just settling in.
The flowers
appear after the less recognizable leaves have fallen. From what I know after years of watching the
transition of my backyard’s weeping cherry blossom, this plant works
backwards.
But back to
the leaves. I can only go by the
description and picture in this field guide, which show me an asymmetrical fan
in a deep green. Though less
recognizable than the spidery, yellow flowers, these leaves are what witch
hazel is cultivated for. Brewed into a
tea or turned into a commercially available astringent, witch hazel is used to
calm sores, bruises, swelling, and overall un-wellness. At least for some.
My mom
always had the perfect remedy for any sickness.
Homemade ginger tea, disgusting cough syrup disguised in Gatorade, and
of course chicken noodle soup. So,
having a panic attack at sixteen, I didn’t question her judgment a when she
placed a washcloth soaked in witch hazel (the kind from the store) on my
forehead. She promised it would sooth me
while I relaxed on the living room sofa.
The smell stung my nose as it filled my sinuses. My head spun and my stomach dropped. Every breath I took ripped at my throat while
the sour taste clung to my tongue. I
threw the cloth on the table and made it to the bathroom just in time for what
little dinner I managed to eat to vacate my stomach.
I return to
my apartment with a small twig of the witch hazel to help with this week’s
writing.
“This is
the witch hazel right?” I show the piece to my roommate.
She
examines it closely before bringing it to her nose. “Yup.
Didn’t you smell it?” She holds
the twig out to me.
I take a
step back but the memory is already stinging at my nose. “No thanks.
I’ll take your word for it.”
While some
might look to witch hazel for a remedy, I’ll continue to admire the bright sign
of fall from a far.
This is a really neat exploration of a plant. I love the name "witch hazel" and that your mom used it as a remedy. Maybe we could even stretch and say she used it as black magic. :) I'd love to hear why your mom uses that as a remedy, as I've never heard of such a thing. Did her parents use this method? Is there a folktale behind it?
ReplyDeleteI knew what the liquid witch hazel was, but I never knew where it came from or that it had some purpose other than an astringent.
ReplyDelete"But they were there, stealing the sun out of the sky to turn into flowers. Stealing summer to replace it with fall." That is a unique and exciting way to write about a late blooming flower.
I like that you are addressing the reader rather than writing something for us to read. It is a great tone.
Yeah! I love that you identified the witch hazel. I could see a longer piece coming out of your discovery and more research into cultural and medicinal uses.
ReplyDelete