| ACEQUIA IN DROUGHT, July 2012
       Rozome on kimono silkBeeswax and soy wax resist
 Framed 28 x 22"
 Private collection
 Snowpack melted off early, recharging the springs. A meager  runoff trickled down the arroyos, stopping short of full course,
 never reaching  the Río.
         Ditch cleaning occurred, as usual, in early March. The mayordomo warned that there would be  less water;
 the irrigation season would be short.
  People planted a bit, or nothing, this year. When the waters  began to flow, the thirsty trees along the ditches
 absorbed every drop  possible.
  Despite late frosts, the apricots bloomed heavily. Painted  lady butterflies blanketed the trees.
 Exquisite green and purple racemes  showered down,
 the refuse of desperate pollination by male mountain  cottonwoods.
  In time, the apricots bore profusely—mealy bright orangefruit about the size of shooter marbles covered the ground.
 Some fell into the acequia, and there they stayed
 as there  was not enough flow to flush them through.
 Though small, they made good jam.     |