An Agave attenuata to Warm My Heart
Friday, December 13, 2019
Rebecca & the Agave |
Today is December 13, 2019 and it is damp and cold outside. It
is dark. Melancholy has set in and a nostalgia for hotter climes beckons. Because I am 77 I am not
interested in sitting under an umbrella at a sandy, Mexican beach sipping a
Cuba Libre.
I want the heat of a warm Mexican city, one far from the
distraction of a beach. I want to be in my native Buenos Aires where it is hot
and humid at this moment. I want a long Argentine summer day.
I could escape to a place that I lived when I was 16.
It was
Nueva Rosita, Coahuila. It was a small and very hot (but bitterly cold and dry
in the winter) mining town where my mother taught in the American School that
was there for the children of the engineers of American Smelting and Refining
Company. Just a km from where we lived (the American Hotel) it was desert with
agaves (not blue ones) and giant saguaros.
Lauren & the Agave |
But there is a spot here in Vancouver that could be an
escape. It would take me with a little imagination to a Mexican desert in
Jalisco where the blue agaves grow.
This is the Macmillan Observatory at the top of Queen
Elizabeth Park. This little tropical oasis of Vancouver has one very blue
agave, Agave attenuata. It was there by that agave that I took the pictures you
see here of my granddaughter Rebecca Stewart and her sister Lauren who are both no longer little girls.
Perhaps sometimes after Christmas I might persuade them to pose by it again.
I would certainly not complain of the heat.
But I must amend my statement that I do not miss a beach. I
miss the port of Veracruz, Mexico. Its beaches do not have waves (the Gulf of Mexico)
and the sand is not very white. But it was there in my mother’s house on Pinzón
Street that Rosemary and I finally fell in love. We walked the Malecón on hot
evenings savouring the smells of the sea mixed with cargo ship bunker oil and
fish stalls. We walked hand in hand not saying much. Our eldest daughter
Alexandra was most probably conceived there.
Rebecca with nopales in Morelia, Mexico |