Curiosity can always get to me, and today is not an exception.
The farmers haven’t cut down the feeder corn,yet and I find it so mysterious, scary and beautiful all at the same time. When I get enamored by a thought I will end up acting on my curiosity, which is how I ended up wandering around my fallen, barbed wire fence, and standing in the sinking mud to get a, “good look” at the corn field.
There are other plants that grow along the edges of a corn field; Milkweeds, Queens Anne’s Lace and a multitude of weeds that as you step past them will deposit burs in your clothing, hair and along your ankles connecting to your socks and shoes making it a treat to remove.
None of that mattered.
I wanted stand next to the towering rows of corn.
Golden, browns and beiges streaked with green and yellows stood in formation. The large ears of corn still connected to the stalks. Some of the corn had deep orangey, yellow kernels peeking out. This is not the type of corn that if you squeeze a kernel with your nail it will pop a milky sweet juice. These kernels are hard. They may end up as Ethanol, livestock feed, a starch, sweetener or for use in fermentation.
I could see where a passing deer, or a hungry raccoon, possum, or Badger ripped off some ears and carried them onto my property and under a bush to feast. A few kernels were on the ground. I knew from years of walking around here, that tomorrow morning if I were to check they would be gone, eaten.
Pulling my feet from the mud, with a distinct gooey sound I stepped next to the first row of corn stalks, and looked up, at their waving tops. I tried to focus on the rows deeper into the field. They were so thick I could only see two ahead of me, and then they blended together like a wallpaper field, or a movie set with either zombies, or dreams being chased way.
“Hey Uriah can you chase away a Zombie?” I laughed as Uriah looked around nervously. “I guess not.” I signed as he seemed to take offense by ducking his head and starring at the ground.
The bitter smell of brown wet leaves, moved around me. Then drifting past as the wind picked up, racing the rain clouds into another county, allowing the sun to spread across my face. The sky brightened with white puffy clouds and a deep blue sky.
This is the moment I relish! The tops of this corn field wave around me as I stood quietly. Here in my old, mud covered gyms shoes, with wet socks while something crawls down my back. I am happy.
Corn moves my car…and then
My attitude
Sweetens my dinner… and
My desserts
Then eases through my digestive track
To return
Looking as if it never left
“Illinois Corn”
http://www.ilcorn.org/uploads/documents/uploader/184It%20Begins%20with%20a%20Kernel.pdf
“National Corn Growers Association”
http://lepton.marz.com/ncga/comm_dev_center/index_PG.asp
“Kane County Farm Bureau”
http://www.kanecfb.com/links.html
4 replies on “Curiosity can always get to me, and today is not an exception”
I remember how surprised a Chicagoan was at how hard that corn is out there!
Most people think, all the corn in the fields can be eaten on the cob..not so
Gerardine
I like the factual parts and the “corn.” However, about your short poem: well, deserts is spelled desserts – unless you are talking about the dry arrid desert.
Gerardine, I love your writing!
Thank you so much.
Thank you, Sparky for finding that typo. I fixed it.
I have to be more observant; spell check fixes words and changes their meanings.
Gerardine Baugh