Tag :: fig season
Monday, 25 May 2026
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That is how you find the first figs of the season. Not by looking, but by putting your hand into the green and trusting that what belongs to this time of year will be there. His fingers closed around one. Small, hard, still more green than ripe. Before he picked it, he leaned in close and smelled it. This is what the wild fig smells like in late May: something between grass and honey and the inside of an old jar that once held something sweet. Not the smell of summer yet but the promise of it. Sharper, more fleeting, and in some ways better.

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The Garden Table

They filled the bowl slowly. This is not a harvest that rushes. The wild figs are small and scattered, and each one asks to be chosen individually. Held for a moment. Decided on. He was good at this. From the outside, his attention can look like stillness. In truth, it is the opposite. A complete and focused presence, every sense directed at the thing in front of him. By then, the striped cloth had been spread on the table under the tree. Not quite set for a meal more like the table had been prepared for whatever the morning decided to become. That cloth has been on this table, in this garden, more times than anyone has counted. Over time, the red lines running through the linen have faded slightly at the edges, the way things do when they are truly used. That is what happens when an object belongs to a life rather than a shelf.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/2"][vc_single_image image="308" img_size="full" alignment="center" css=""][vc_column_text css=".vc_custom_1779961495111{margin-top: 66px !important;margin-bottom: 66px !important;}"]

The Shed

Later, he walked to the far end of the property, where the grandfather's small wooden shed stands at the edge of the field. He does not go inside. Inside, the tools have their own order  the grandfather's order. That is not something you disturb. Still, he stands in front of it sometimes and looks at the door. Everything the land requires is in there: the things that cut and dig and carry, the things that have been repaired so many times they are more repair than original. Some of them will outlast all of us. They are made for exactly one purpose, and they fulfil it without complaint. There is something in that kind of faithfulness that a child understands intuitively, even if he cannot name it yet. Behind him, the wheat had already gone golden. May turning to June. The shed stood as it always stands. Patient, full, waiting for the hands that know how to use what is inside.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=".vc_custom_1779879165510{margin-top: 22px !important;margin-bottom: 66px !important;}" el_class="editorial_two_gallery"][vc_column width="1/2"][vc_single_image image="311" img_size="full" alignment="center" css=""][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/2"][vc_single_image image="312" img_size="full" alignment="center" css=""][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=".vc_custom_1779962565077{margin-bottom: 66px !important;}"][vc_column][vc_column_text css=""]

Waiting for Summer

The figs on the branch were the ones not yet ready. Another week, maybe two. He looked at them with the patience of someone who has learned that wanting something sooner does not make it arrive sooner. The land has its own schedule. You adjust to it, not the other way around. In his open palms, he held three small figs and looked at them the way he looks at things he is trying to memorise. Not only the appearance. Also the weight, the temperature the particular way this thing feels on this morning, in this garden. Somewhere inside him, an archive is forming. No index, no order, no system. Just accumulated knowledge stored below language, waiting for the moments when it will be needed. These figs will become glyko tou koutaliou. The spoon sweet his grandmother makes every year from the first wild harvest. Cooked slowly with sugar until they are amber and syrup-thick. Tasting of everything this season was before the summer took over. He knows this. And he is waiting for that too.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=".vc_custom_1779347937512{margin-top: 22px !important;margin-bottom: 22px !important;}"][vc_column width="1/2"][vc_single_image image="314" img_size="full" alignment="center" css=""][vc_column_text css=".vc_custom_1779961590353{margin-top: 66px !important;margin-bottom: 66px !important;}"]

Chamomile

In the late morning, he sat at the table with the bowl of figs in front of him. His chin rested in one hand. In the other, he held a fig. There is a look he gets when he has stopped doing and started thinking. Or when he has stopped thinking and started feeling, which in him amounts to the same thing. He was not sad. Nor happy in any demonstrative way.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/2"][vc_single_image image="315" img_size="full" alignment="center" css=""][vc_column_text css=".vc_custom_1779961620728{margin-top: 66px !important;margin-bottom: 66px !important;}"]

Wild Fig

Simply present. In the garden, at the end of May, with the figs and the old table and the striped cloth. Above him, the light came through the fig leaves in pieces. In patterns. Never all at once. The candle had been burning since morning. Chamomile and wild fig. The smell of this garden distilled into something you could carry with you. Something you could light in December, when the fig tree is bare and the garden is quiet, and you need to remember what late May felt like. That is what a good candle does. Not decoration memory. Open and waiting.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row css=".vc_custom_1779878025936{margin-bottom: 22px !important;}" el_class="editorial_gallery"][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_single_image image="317" img_size="full" alignment="center" onclick="link_image" css_animation="none" css=""][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_single_image image="320" img_size="full" alignment="center" onclick="link_image" css=""][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_single_image image="319" img_size="full" alignment="center" onclick="link_image" css=""][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_single_image image="322" img_size="full" alignment="center"][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text css=".vc_custom_1779961632303{margin-top: 44px !important;margin-bottom: 22px !important;}"]In the end, he picked up the last fig. Turned it in his fingers. Put it back. Some things are better left where they are.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
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