02/23/2021

Floyd
253 Reviews
Auto-translated
Show original

Floyd
Top Review
41
How Hayra lost the loneliness
Hayra was truly lonely, possibly because the pond in which he had been made to live had long since tilted. The pond had become sluggish, a nagarmuddy brackish broth, the edges blurred in sweetish mud, greenish woody champaca leaves, soil, and galbanum. On the pool thousands of little soap bubbles bustled. Must have been too little water in the moss, and every now and then it smelled like sweat as larger bubbles burst from the depths of the puddle at the surface. Who wanted to know what Hayra was really up to down there, or what path the jasmine blossoms, which sometimes popped to the top with the pustules, had taken before.
In the mud there were still a few remnants of the pulp of the limes that the neighbouring children had thrown at Hayra in the beginning. They just didn't see the point of it anymore. Also because his anger about it had subsided after balsamic incense had been burned on the pond to calm him down, incense sticks of sandalwood and marigold blossom, and the sack of cumin that was sprinkled on the lake calmed the smells of Hayra. And then it was all India shop, amber, cinnamon and benzoin threads, one liked to stay overnight in the smoky tepee, with Hayra, the spicy hippie.
**
"Hayra" is about halfway between Lomros' cumin-spiced "Nefer" and the goat farm "Homa." After a difficult green-animalic beginning, a delightfully balsamic spicy smoke develops with cumin, resins and incense in the foreground.
(With thanks to Shaking - for tester and the incredible trailer, which was allowed to be filmed here)
In the mud there were still a few remnants of the pulp of the limes that the neighbouring children had thrown at Hayra in the beginning. They just didn't see the point of it anymore. Also because his anger about it had subsided after balsamic incense had been burned on the pond to calm him down, incense sticks of sandalwood and marigold blossom, and the sack of cumin that was sprinkled on the lake calmed the smells of Hayra. And then it was all India shop, amber, cinnamon and benzoin threads, one liked to stay overnight in the smoky tepee, with Hayra, the spicy hippie.
**
"Hayra" is about halfway between Lomros' cumin-spiced "Nefer" and the goat farm "Homa." After a difficult green-animalic beginning, a delightfully balsamic spicy smoke develops with cumin, resins and incense in the foreground.
(With thanks to Shaking - for tester and the incredible trailer, which was allowed to be filmed here)
37 Replies