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Authors: Jason Webster

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RaYYan: well-irrigated, lush, verdant

taRWiYa: reflection, consideration

Faustino’s words of a couple of days before back at his tobacco plantation came back to me: gathering and telling the local stories was a way of watering and irrigating this dry, endangered land. He might
not
have been the first to perceive the link, but here there seemed to be proof of some kind of the truth of what he had said.

I thought of the work we had put into the land over the past year, the scrub we had cleared away, the trees we had planted and tended: hours of sweat to try to make a small change in this abandoned landscape. There was magic here: people had always said so, but now it was as if I could see it properly for the first time myself. Not the magic of Marina and Concha, with their rituals and witchery, nor even the fairies and
duendes
that had seemed to make an appearance in our lives over the past months. The life that seemed to vibrate from the rocks and earth round here came from the stories that flowed through it: stories that were a vital part of the landscape, and without which it would be impossible to understand the area to which we had come to live. Learn to read the land, as Faustino said, and you started to get a sense of how the land and the stories that came out of it were one: neither could properly exist without the other. And in a world where we lost our understanding of the land, where we abused it, where we built golf courses and airports and miniature Eiffel Towers, the tales dried up: there was no one to gather and nurture them, no one to listen to them. Crowd it out with so much other noise and you would fail to hear the earth-stories as they were whispered by the stones and the trees, the rivers and mountains. They needed silence; for men to sense their presence, then to weave them into legends and folk tales to be passed on, and on. Some were living stories, such as the Pelegríns of Les Useres. Others came from the history of what had happened here: the Cathars, the Moriscos, Papa Luna. Some seemed to explain the world around: the colour of rosemary flowers, why clefts and gorges appeared where they did. And then there were others that just seemed to exist of their own, inexplicable; perhaps the better for it. Yet they were as much the part of the landscape as the others, more so, even.

Where they had come from, and who had first told them, mattered not. They resonated with the land and the land resonated with them. They were the earth-stories of Penyagolosa.

The Story of the Three Pieces of Advice

AFTER MANY YEARS
away, a merchant who had become rich travelling the Seven Seas decided it was time to return to his wife and home. But before making the journey back, he went to see a hermit who lived in the mountains, to seek his advice. The hermit was known for his wise words and good counsel, but all he said to the merchant was:

Never leave a straight path
.

Never get involved in other people’s affairs
.

Always sleep on a decision before doing anything important
.

Now the merchant was a bit disappointed when he heard this.

‘Fine advice that was,’ he thought to himself. ‘I could easily have come up with that myself.’

And he went on his way, heading for home.

Not long after he came across a group of travellers who were going the same way and he decided to join their company. After they had gone a few miles they came across a fork in the road. Up ahead stood a great mountain, the path winding up its slope until it seemed to disappear in the mists. To the right was another path, much flatter and going around the mountain instead.

‘Come on,’ said the merchant’s companions, looking at the alternative path. ‘Let’s go this way. It’ll save us an hour at least on our journey.’

Now the merchant was about to go with them, but at the last minute he remembered the hermit’s words.

‘Perhaps there was something in them,’ he thought. And he decided to carry on straight and up over the mountain.

He walked and he walked and he walked, and the path seemed to be even longer than it had looked from the bottom. But eventually, as all things come to an end in this world, he found himself down once again on the other side of the mountain. There he found his companions. But they were all sitting by the side of the road, their heads in their hands. Some were almost crying.

‘What ho!’ cried the merchant. ‘Why such long faces?’

‘We should have listened to you and gone up over the mountain,’ one of them said. ‘Soon after you left us a group of thieves attacked us and stole all our baggage, and they whipped and beat us all the way here.’

After picking themselves up and cleaning their wounds, the group were once again back on the road, and come nightfall they found an inn in which to spend the night. At dinnertime they sat down at a table and waited to be served.

But the innkeeper and his wife were having a terrible row that evening, and they were throwing pots and pans at each other in the kitchen rather than preparing the travellers’ food.

‘We should go in and do something,’ one of the travellers said. ‘Someone’s going to get hurt.’

They all got up to intervene, but the merchant stayed where he was, remembering the hermit’s second piece of advice: not to get involved in other people’s business.

When the travellers confronted the innkeeper, he got so cross with them that he forgot all about the argument with his wife, picked up a big stick and chased them all out of the inn. And they all had to sleep outside in the cold, with no dinner.

Sitting on his own, back inside, the merchant began to realise the hermit’s words were more valuable than at first they had seemed.

The next day the merchant arrived back at his home village, and he saw his old house. But before going up to meet his wife he decided to hide in some nearby bushes to see what he could see.

Shortly after, his wife appeared at the door with a young priest. And as she said goodbye to him she gave him a kiss.

Now the merchant was furious with rage and he would have run in there and then and killed his wife on the spot. But he remembered the hermit’s last piece of advice: always to sleep on something before making a decision. So he walked up to his house as though nothing had happened, and his wife received him with open arms.

His wife was so shocked to see him that she was speechless, and it was only the following morning that she found she could speak again.

‘Yesterday,’ she said as the merchant was waking up at her side, ‘was
the
happiest day of my life. First because Fate brought you back to me – you who I haven’t seen nor heard from for so many long years. And secondly because our son came to visit me from the seminary, where he is training to become a priest.’

Giving thanks once again for the pieces of advice, the merchant decided that the hermit must have been none other than King Solomon himself, whose wise words had brought him safely back home.

AUGUST

The month
Augustus
in Latin is called
Ab
in Syriac and
Shahrivarmah
in Persian, and is made up of thirty-one days. The dew begins to return, the heat lessens and mornings become fresh. This is the season for harvesting almonds. Peaches can be eaten now, and dates and jujubes start to ripen. It is said that wood will not rot if it is cut after the third day of this month. It is the time for sowing rice, and for harvesting carob, safflower seed, cress, coriander, sesame, melon and gherkin. In order to speed up the ripening of grapes, work up the soil around them and the dust settling on them will have this effect
.

Ibn al-Awam,
Kitab al-Falaha
, The Book of Agriculture, 12th century

THE NIGHTS ARE
very hot. Surprisingly, the older part of the house, with its thick stone walls, can actually feel warmer at night than the newer section. The stones seem to absorb the heat over the course of the day and then radiate it in the hours of darkness. Thank goodness for modern insulation: it seems to be doing the trick. I would sleep outside, where the air can be tolerably cool, but the very idea is enough to send Salud into apoplexy. ‘We’d get eaten alive!’ She’s probably right.

Still, we stay up late, adjusting our existence to the weather and the seasons. It’s too hot to do much through the day, and everything just slows down to a relaxed and gentle pace: more out of necessity than anything else, as any physical exertion in this kind of heat can be lethal. Builders are always the first casualties of any heat-wave, quickly followed by the elderly, despite the custom of taking siestas during the hottest hours. But there’s clearly something unhealthy about toiling away under the sun when it’s almost 40 degrees. So in the interests of my own longevity I have decided to join in the national tradition of
doing
precious little until it begins to cool down again – which shouldn’t be until mid-September at the earliest. I limit myself to watering the trees after sunset and preparing salads for dinner, our bodies, like the plants, craving fresh, watery food over anything else. The pomegranate tree has only given us half a dozen fruits after the heavy pruning I gave it in the spring, but the juice is sharp and refreshing in the morning, with just a teaspoon or two of sugar added to take away some of the bite.

It is the time of year of the
Lágrimas de San Lorenzo
– the tears of San Lorenzo, the spectacular meteor shower that falls through the night sky. San Lorenzo is actually 10 August, but the meteors have come a couple of days later this time. Still, they’ve coincided with a new moon, so there’s no other light to filter out the streaks of yellow, white and gold as these rocks from outer space hit the atmosphere and burn up. Why San Lorenzo should have been crying in the first place, I can’t remember. Ah, yes, he was the one who was barbecued to death by the Romans, famously telling his executors that he was done on one side and they could turn him over. Enough to bring tears to anyone’s eyes. Put on a nice show for it, though.

We stayed out on the patio for a couple of hours gazing up at the sky and trying to spot the meteors. It’s not exactly easy, as they’re so fast that the moment you say, ‘Ooh, look, there’s one’, it’s flashed and disappeared. After a while we stopped and just tried to keep our eyes on the section of the sky where they seemed to be most concentrated. Eventually, with practice, we saw some that did cut across the darkness at the very spot where we were looking. It was a relaxing experience: as though you had to empty your mind and let it happen rather than trying to catch them all the time.

It was late when we finally went inside. The anti-mosquito candles we’d placed around us like a barrier could only do so much, it appeared. Salud scratched at her arms as she closed the doors shut.


Malditos bichos
– damn bugs.’

*

I went for a walk around our land at dusk one evening. Our first full year up here was almost at an end; had we managed to achieve much in that time? Everywhere I looked I was struck by all that still needed
to
be done: great tracts of land I’d wanted to clear but which were still under the tyranny of the gorse; walls that had fallen down and needed rebuilding, but so far out of reach it would take an effort of will and strength just to walk through to them; fields I had ploughed after a fashion with the rotovator but which were now once again awash with weeds. The sheer vastness of what we had up here, and the amount of work for just one man overwhelmed me once more. Was it absolute madness all this? How could I possibly have expected to ‘farm’ forty acres of rocky mountainside on my own? The idea was insane.

I skipped up the track to inspect my truffle-tree plantation. Only half of the two hundred I had planted up here had survived the boars’ onslaught. Those that remained appeared to have rooted in well enough, but were still little more than three of four inches high, while the wild flowers that had sprung up around them were up to my waist in some places. If I wasn’t careful the oaks and holm oaks I’d put up here were going to get choked and lost in the returning thicket. It was simply too hot now even to contemplate doing anything about it. It would have to wait till autumn, in between the almond and the olive harvests, if I had time.

I carried on walking up the slope, to one of the old pine trees, sitting down with my back against its trunk, sensing the temperature of the air slowly, slowly begin to fall as the sky darkened and the birds circled and screeched in the hollow below. Down to the left stood the farmhouses, where Salud was switching on the first lights. It no longer amazed me to think the power to generate the electricity came from the sun. You quickly grew used to it, then began to understand the intensity of the energy that beat down on us daily. Living with it, feeling it on your back, watching it bring things to life, then destroy them.

So much I had wanted to achieve, and so much still to do. It was a start, I told myself. We had done what we could. Perhaps we might have accomplished more, cleared more land, planted more trees, built up more walls, laid out a great irrigation network to make better use of the water coming out from the spring. All these ideas for transforming the mountains had been at the front of my mind when we started. Now I had come to understand what such projects entailed.

BOOK: Sacred Sierra
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