It smelled like the parched clay doused with pond water in the Siyarams’ backyard. The aroma was entirely different from the memory of rain I carried from my childhood and my part of the world—ozone-charged air, wet moss, Wolfe’s “clean but funky” scent of the south. But it was entirely appealing: warm, organic, mineral-rich. It was the smell of waiting, paid off: 40 years or more for a sandalwood tree to grow its fragrant heartwood; four months of hot, dust-blown summer in northern India before the monsoons arrive in July; a day for terra-cotta to slow-fire in a kiln.
— From Making Perfume From the Rain: Indian villagers have found a way to bottle the fragrance of monsoons at The Atlantic.
Great article, Robin! Thanks.
I really liked it too.
Now I want to make an “After the rain in the Michigan woods Attar.” Very educational.
Great idea!