By Darin Wahl
We arrived to the valley late, sweaty, hungry and curious. Our hosts were grouped together chatting casually as neighbors will. We set down our packs somewhere out of the cow shit and went over for handshakes and introductions. Two of us peeled off with Asrael, a young farmer homesteading on the sloped edge of the cloud forest. Asrael led us up and across toward his land about five miles distant. We followed a dirt road, rutted and muddy. Asrael strolled along the mountain roads with familiar ease. He plucked tangerines from branches that hung over the road and tossed us each one. We leaned on the side of the road and tore into the sweet orange flesh, juice making sticky tracks on my already sweat streaked chin. As I hefted my 50lb pack, my boot slipped on a rock. I didn’t fall hard. I caught myself in push-up position. No harm done. Except that both hands plunged foot deep into muddy water. The splash washed my face, head and shirt as thoroughly as if I fell straight in. Asrael was in stomach-clenching hysterics. I laughed too, when I had spit the mud out of my mouth. He climbed into the forest and came back with plate-sized leaves I could wipe myself with. He was still giggling as he handed over nature's towels.
The house wasn’t much of a house. It was more a roofed deck that had four rooms. No doors, no windows, no insulation. We slept on pads on the floor. Over the next few days we helped out as we could, usually doing small tasks around the homestead. His cows mostly looked after themselves. I learned about coffee socks, which are exactly what they sound like: a sock stuffed with coffee and then boiling water is poured through. For a stronger brew let it soak a while. Asreal stirred in a ladle full of sugar and fresh milk from his milk cow. That was good coffee. I learned that tapirs, elusive short-trunked pig-like jungle animals, can be found seemingly easily by unlucky dogs, as one named “Pinky” discovered through a quick mauling. Spiders were ever present. Palm sized (“little fellas”) lived in our room with us. One night Asrael called us out: “You want to see something?”
“Yeah of course we do.”
He waved us over and then shone his flashlight on the biggest spider I had ever seen. It was reddish too, which made it seem a bit extra fierce. “What happens if one of these bites you?”
“Die.” Asrael was not a big storyteller; he got to the point.
“You see it?” he asked us, “You ok?” asking if I had had a good look.
I said, “Yeah. I see it.”
Then he swung his arm back, brought it around and smashed that spider with the hammer I had just realized he was holding. “OOoH” I yelled, jumping back. The spider exploded. The hammer went between two slats of wall and deposited spider detritus in the bedroom and all about us. The next morning a line of ants was making short work of the bits. Five inch legs were being carried off by dozens of workers. Not a bit went to waste.
One morning he asked us if we wanted to come with him to get lunch. We donned our rubber boots and followed him off the cow pasture into the surrounding trees. Vines that hung 60 feet from the tops of trees were swung upon. Tangerines were eaten. Ways were macheteed through the brush. Mud climbed up boots then legs. “Aha,” he said slapping a tree with the flat of his blade, “this one.” It was a large mature palm tree. One with thousands of two inch black spines that made it look like a humongous overly aggressive cactus. Asrael hacked it down with several expert swings of his machete. He walked up to the crown and sliced off the top 6 or 7 feet. After removing palm leaves, he split open the trunk. He peeled away layers until he exposed the white core, which he removed with a few more well-placed hacks. The final product was about three feet long and three inches thick. He slung this over his shoulder and walked off toward the house. After a moment, we turned to follow. The rest of the tree lay forsaken where it fell. That was lunch. Heart of palm.