Wonder if he’s still farming the wind, the weathers, the feathers & petals, cold fragile harvest of marginal land. Some year the mountain’s frost took it all, some years the birds & the bugs, (it happens, he said) but in a season of different fortune he piled the apples high in gleaming hills of yellow & reds on a bed of flowing periwinkle. You might see him up in the towering Ben Davis, fruit-laden giant, or down hauling the ladder through a tangle of vines & flowers, October light a mellow fire of far-off warmth. Seemed to live on air & apples, apples three times a day (never get tired of them you want one?) He was the arms & legs of the orchard, the part that could see & know, and the trees he tended grow old under the snows sinking roots that remember his name.— Suzanne Freeman