Reprise: On love, wine, and the natural world
This Valentine’s Day, I don’t think I could share my thoughts with you any better than by presenting today what I wrote just one year ago. Year by year, the sentiments that follow continue to drive my heart. Happy Valentine’s Day, my friend.
American naturalist and essayist John Burroughs once wrote:
“A sense of the power and mystery of Nature shall spring up as fully in one’s heart after he has made the circuit of his own field as after returning from a voyage ’round the world.”
That statement sure rings true with me. I can hike the same trail over and over again in different seasons or in the same, and still I find that I cannot divorce myself from that sense of wonder that I used to know as a kid. I still want to get belly down on the ground sometimes just to marvel at the life going on within a square foot of space.
I hope I never lose this sense of awe, this inspired revelation, this connection to our world’s intricate graces, this true love.
And so I endeavor to keep on learning, exploring, taking my world into deeper realms of understanding, connection, and reconnection. Whether it’s that tongue-brain connection that tells me why I like a wine and not just that I like it, or whether it’s being able to observe and uncover the relationships between rock, tree, cloud, vine, flower, bird and insect, I continually want to know more about this relationship between me and my earth, us and our earth. I feel it strongly, viscerally. I feel it because I choose to live in the present, this moment on the trail, right now.
I want others to share this, too: the desire to find the beauty, curiosity, wisdom, and strength from this natural world that surrounds us, supports us, and waits for us to accept it, acquiesce to it, embrace it. And therefore I want to teach others to watch, listen, observe, and feel Nature. Indeed, we can all gain strength from feeling Nature’s continuity, diversity, magnitude, and intelligence which are all around us every day.
We just have to choose to feel.
It is for these reasons that my love affair with the natural world is very much like a love affair with wine.
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February 15th, 2008 11:08
Wonderful words. Thanks for this post!
Keep on hiking!
Kathleen Lisson
February 15th, 2008 11:55
You bet, Kathleen. And if you’re ever out this way, bring your hiking boots!
February 21st, 2008 22:11
really nice entry. i agree, the sense of awe that the natural world can evoke is one of the most poignant experiences of humanity. this feeling, when it strikes, is by itself, enough to live for!
keep up the great posting. i just found your site and am glad to have done so!
February 26th, 2008 11:40
Why thank you, Alison, and welcome to Winehiker Witiculture! Hope to see you again here soon.