Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Learning To Burn

It was a beautiful day in SW France today. A perfect day for burning things.

I needed a change from building, painting, trying to make the house look good. Mick had been around with the chainsaw and this weekend he'd come back with little bundles of sticks, fire starters, and a canister of gasoline.

With a garden full of felled trees, chopped ivy and branches, I thought all it would take was heaping it all up, pouring on some gas and tossing in a match. Who knew that destruction was such hard work?

There's an art to burning. It's hard work keeping the fire going when most of the wood is wet. The center of the pile burns, leaving a lattice work of scorched and untouched branches and Mick showed me how you have to keep moving things to the center.

Angeline our neighbor watched me over the fence, amused. "Amy, Amy!" she called. She was asking if we read the paper. I wondered if this was a good time to talk about current events or the weather but what she was trying to figure out was if we had any newspaper lying around. It seemed a little beside the point what with a whole yard full of stuff to burn but I didn't want to argue so I took her offering of the Sunday paper, tour a couple of pages off, twisted them up and shoved them in.

After a while, I was sweating and cursing as the fire threatened to die for the third or fourth time. "Amy, Amy!" I looked over my shoulder and Angeline was passing an old shovel full of burning coals towards me over the fence.

It must have come from their woodburner. She'd gone to all the trouble of scooping it out in the living room, carrying it outside and up the garden steps. I thanked her and dumped it on the fire, determined to get the thing going again so she wouldn't be disappointed. As I poked more branches in she urged me on. "De sous, Amy! De sous!" In? Under? On? I thought it meant beneath but when I tried that she kept shaking her head.

The fire got roaring again and then suddenly it was the most important thing in the whole world to keep it going. Hunching, bending, grabbing and shoving branches and trunks, clawing bunches of ivy - I couldn't stop. I thought of things I could or should be doing, productive things, but none of them mattered anymore.

I thought of civilization. Culture, books, art, music, machines - hadn't we come a lot further than this? Wood in fire. Must not let it go out. Keep it burning. To burn is to live.

Angeline had gone back into her house. Mick and Eric were safely inside the studio. I thought of Maria Schneider and Tura Satana, two bad-ass babes who died this past week. How each in their own odd way made being female more complex and interesting. I grabbed a twisted branch and plunged it into the fire. Then I kicked it in with my boot, as hard as I could.



6 comments:

Jim S said...

Reminds me of burning giant piles of leaves & branches when I was a kid in NW Arkansas - learned the hard way that you've got to be carefull when some of the leaves are poison ivy!

the fly in the web said...

That was a beautifully descriptive post....I can see your fire, your neighbour...the way it took you over.
Thank you.

Amy said...

I can't seem to make the comments work today!

I'm curious about the burning of poison ivy Jim, does it give off an evil gas?

Thanks for your kind comment Fly - since the post I haven't been able to make anything happen with the fire. Meanwhile Angeline next door was out in her housedress burning a load of stuff. In fact there seem to be fires all over this week, for once I'm in sync with the locals about something.

the fly in the web said...

Probably all making the most of it before bonfires are forbidden again once the warm weather starts.

Rosie said...

it is such a relief to burn anything that has no connection with a woodstove....burn baby burn...

Amy said...

It's that transitional period Fly, between putting the hunting clothes in storage and getting out the cycling togs...

The woodburner was sold (cheap) yesterday Rosie! To a family who had no other heat and a big room that would handle that thing. The woman's teeth were chattering when she came to pick it up. Won't miss it (I hope...as long as the heating fuel doesn't run out again).