Shadow and Silence Beneath the Guásimo
In the final days of summer, when the sun bears down on Valle Verde without mercy and the earth cracks open in silence, Eder came upon this sight: a cluster of cows and calves pressed together beneath a guásimo, still, as though the tree itself had told them this was where they belonged.
The guásimo — Guazuma ulmifolia, one of the most generous trees in the Caribbean landscape — had been standing there long before the heat of this season arrived. Its broad canopy and dense shade are, for the cattle of this region, the closest thing to shelter: no fence, no roof, only this tree that knows its purpose well. The ground around it told the whole story: dry, yellowed, the vegetation scattered and surrendered to the summer.
Eder captured the scene without interfering. The animals rested together, indifferent to the camera, wrapped in that heavy calm that settles over the midday hours. A simple postcard from Valle Verde — one that quietly reminds us why trees in pastures are never just decoration.