APPLES & TOAST

red apples

“The humblest tasks get beautified if loving hands do them.”
— LOUISA MAY ALCOTT - LITTLE WOMEN

To peel an apple with a small knife is to know it intimately. The curve of its shape sitting in the palm of my hand as I turn it. I quickly learned how to peel back only the first layer of skin; not making many hundreds of small slices, but really peeling till all the table is covered in bright curls like ribbons. This knowledge was not told to me, not read in books, but was instead gained through a sensory exploration of my subject, the matter now being stored in some back compartment of my brain so that, when I pick up another apple, the knowledge will flow through my hands just as blood flows through my veins. 

 

THE RITUAL OF THE APPLES

 

I sat peeling bucket after bucket, day after day. Three weeks passed. The apples were of two types: one set were rosy cheeked, blushing red on their dappled green faces. Some had freckles. A few had warts, but I loved them just the same. These were crisp, quite petit, and their flesh was stained barely pink. The second group were the color of aspen leaves in early fall: green-almost-yellow. They were sweet smelling, soft fleshed, easily bruised. These were frost-bitten by the snows. We had picked them one dark evening when the snow was barely falling, but they had frozen, stuck fast to the grass they lay in, and now there were bits of grass on the table, in the bucket, and on my hands. 

 

Sometimes we cursed the apples, wishing there were less than forty crates of them. But really it was a pleasant task. We worked by the fireside, and the smell in the room was sweet. They were peeled, cored, then cut into rounds to be dried. I strung some of them along the ceiling like Christmas garlands. It takes just two days to dry them this way, the heat from the fire rising up to hang among the rafters. As I worked I sang. 

 

THE TOAST CEREMONY

 

At lunch we would stop, pushing aside the huge piles of peelings to lay down plates and cups. Then there came the sounds of Oliver making tea, and out comes the soup from the day before, and out comes the bread for toasting. We toasted our bread on the top of the old fireplace, it being as good as, or better than, any appliance for the same purpose. Thick slices of bread, browned and spread with lashings of butter. Afterwards, being that we had no running water, Oliver would fetch water in the washing up buckets, and we would take turns to wash or cook for the day. Then it was back to the apples.

 

garlands of dried apples
toast and jam
toasting bread on fireplace
red Snow White apples
wooden clock
rosy organic apples
pile of wood
apple peeling
making toast on fireplace
thick slices of toast
apple rings

FAIRYTALE FOREST

fairytale forest Norway

The forest was like a fairytale - both charming and a little terrifying.


Once upon a time there were three billy goats, who were to go up to the hillside to make themselves fat, and the name of all three was "Gruff."

On the way up was a bridge over a cascading stream they had to cross; and under the bridge lived a great ugly troll , with eyes as big as saucers, and a nose as long as a poker.

So first of all came the youngest Billy Goat Gruff to cross the bridge.

"Trip, trap, trip, trap! " went the bridge.

"Who's that tripping over my bridge?" roared the troll .

"Oh, it is only I, the tiniest Billy Goat Gruff , and I'm going up to the hillside to make myself fat," said the billy goat, with such a small voice.

"Now, I'm coming to gobble you up," said the troll.

"Oh, no! pray don't take me. I'm too little, that I am," said the billy goat. "Wait a bit till the second Billy Goat Gruff comes. He's much bigger."

"Well, be off with you," said the troll.

A little while after came the second Billy Goat Gruff to cross the bridge.

Trip, trap, trip, trap, trip, trap, went the bridge.

"Who's that tripping over my bridge?" roared the troll.

"Oh, it's the second Billy Goat Gruff , and I'm going up to the hillside to make myself fat," said the billy goat, who hadn't such a small voice.

"Now I'm coming to gobble you up," said the troll.

"Oh, no! Don't take me. Wait a little till the big Billy Goat Gruff comes. He's much bigger."

"Very well! Be off with you," said the troll.

But just then up came the big Billy Goat Gruff .

Trip, trap, trip, trap, trip, trap! went the bridge, for the billy goat was so heavy that the bridge creaked and groaned under him.

"Who's that tramping over my bridge?" roared the troll.

"It's I! The big Billy Goat Gruff ," said the billy goat, who had an ugly hoarse voice of his own.

"Now I 'm coming to gobble you up," roared the troll.

Well, come along! I've got two spears,
And I'll poke your eyeballs out at your ears;
I've got besides two curling-stones,
And I'll crush you to bits, body and bones.

That was what the big billy goat said. And then he flew at the troll, and poked his eyes out with his horns, and crushed him to bits, body and bones, and tossed him out into the cascade, and after that he went up to the hillside. There the billy goats got so fat they were scarcely able to walk home again. And if the fat hasn't fallen off them, why, they're still fat; and so,

Snip, snap, snout.
This tale's told out.

 

ferns in Norway
mossy forest Norway
pine and roots
enchanted forest stream
fairytale forest ardal
carved owls fairytale forest ardal
stream in the forest
fairytale forest ardal
enchanted forest river
little model church in the woods
pine forest Norway
moss like ferns
carved owl in the forest
mushroom on mossy tree
fairytale forest ardal Norway
enchanted river
black and brown feather

BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

Norske Folkeeventyr - Norwegian Folk Tales, collected by Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe. (translated by G. W. Dasent)

NORWAY IN NOVEMBER

Norway in winter

SMALL WONDERS TO BE FOUND IN THE COUNTRYSIDE
. . .

 

Rows of cut wheat - their lines taking on the shape of the hills.

 

Little red and white cabins.

 

Watching the lake freeze day by day.

 

Mountains. Their steep sides dropping straight down into fjords, the depths of which are only to be guessed at.

 

Walking Bobby in the early morn... Snowy walks through silent, blanketed forests.

 

Turf roofed cottages with red doors.

 

The ritual of fire making.

 

Stopping work for a long lunch.

 

Veggies dug from a layer of snow - leeks and potatoes and kale… Wintery soups.

 

Hot cups of tea.

 

Signs of a passing deer, spelled out in peeling bark.

 

When the sun looks like a disc behind a wall of winter fog.

 

Garlands of apples strung on the ceiling.

 

The twang and pause of somebody learning to play the guitar.

SMALL WONDERS TO BE FOUND IN THE CITY
. . .

 

Old ladies with tiny dogs.
 
Art in the park.
 
Roses in November.
 
Art Nouveau façades. 
 
Bikes everywhere.
 
Beautiful old buildings - minarets and twisted iron balconies.
 
The swoosh of train doors, and the way they close perfectly, their design so precise.
 
Frozen fall leaves.
 
Breath clouds - hanging around you in the air.
 
A gratitude for my shoes, for keeping my toes warm.
 
Boxy steeples.
 
Cats with thick fur.
 
Christmas cookies at every supermarket.
 
The painted roof of an old wooden church - all roses and curlicues and fat singing cherubs.

beautiful mirror lake Norway
snowy path
turf house by lake
bobby the dog
vigeland park gates oslo
blue house Norway
vigeland park gates
strolling
iron snowflake
vigeland park Oslo in winter
vigeland sculpture of woman
oslo in winter
red roses in the snow
pink building Oslo
fallen leaves
small wooden cabin
wooden door
snow on forest path
stables
spiced cookie Norway
stack of wood
treehouse in snow
kongevei path Norway
pine trees
daisies in the snow
roaring fire Christmas
wheat stalks
snow bark and moss
vestre svindal path
firewood
red house hidden by trees
snow covered fields
walking bobby the dog
walking bobby the dog
deer or elk marks on tree
snowy path
snow covered pine tree
norwegian church steeple
hoarfrost
preikestolen in November
Norway in winter
silver hanging lantern
little house in the woods
preikestolen view of the fjord
me, Zoe Eccles
norwegian fjord village
ardal old painted church
painted church ardal
melting snow in mountains
candle light
dried apple garlands
guitar
wicker bicycle basket
oslo Christmas lights
oslo opera house at night
old painted man in the moon
norwegian lake
shop by the fjord
mirror lake
boat and jetty
painted cherub norwegian renaissance
bars in oslo
bars in oslo
afternoon tea oslo
oslo lights at night
graffiti in oslo
tunnels in Norway
preikestolen in november