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Archive for the ‘The Garden’ Category

Generations

She returned this evening, as she does.  A praying mantis.  Each evening now, as days shorten and chill, she overnights near my office window.

Like her mother before her, she laid egg cases in the agastache in the garden beneath the window and now sits quietly next to them.  Her mother was the biggest praying mantis I ever saw.  Inside the gate,  tucked off from harsh wind, the garden is protected.  A good place to live life.

She is dying now – like her mother before her.  Once bright green, she is browning.  She remains so still I think she has already passed.  It is so cold now.   In spring, I will bury her in that garden as I did her mother.  I am sure there is a keen biological reason for the similarity of habit.  But I prefer  the memory of generations.

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Longshot

It was the sharp colour on dead leaves that caught my eye.  About two weeks ago.  Closer inspection turned up a monarch caterpillar.  Surprisingly plump fellow for the decaying  stalks of milkweed in his vicinity.

With drought and all sorts of fancy weather patterns, we spotted no monarch caterpillars this year,  assuming, like everything else in the garden, they bloomed and flew off early.

But here was a longshot.  Closing in on November, no food source, and nighttime temperatures edging toward a freeze.  To improve his chances, I relocated him to a more secluded spot in the garden where milkweed leaves remained large and green.

Just that night a storm blew through, by morning I found  no trace.  Wherever it was, I wished it well.

Cleaning up the garden this week, there are few leaves left on any tree or plant.  Filling a composting bag, I turned to scoop up another leaf pile when I noticed it.  Hanging by the slimmest of threads on the edge of the bag, the unmistakable form of a monarch chrysalis, green sheathed cocoon with golden zipper, caught on the bag itself.  From the location, my guess  is I had seen this fellow before.  It wove its chrysalis onto a dead leaf that promptly blew into the garden, leaving it dreadfully exposed.

I tied a tiny thread on the chrysalis stem, suspended it from a stick, and placed it in a jar.  It  rode out distant echoes of Hurricane Sandy inside my house, inside its chrysalis.  I watch daily for signs of failure, they may yet come, its journey late begun, then disrupted, now still.

This one is a Longshot, the name stuck.  I am hoping for the best.

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Weeds II

In a recent post I gave a  sidelong glance to the questionable virtue of weeds.   I must report having since found virtue in the Genus Solidago, the goldenrods.

Noticed first in my yard, mimicking Pitcher sage –  it bloomed like the sun.  Then seen spread across this region, ditches, fields – by plant or by pasture – goldenrod gets around.

A harbinger of autumn, goldenrod is the best kind of  traveler.  Where my world is limited to garden edge, goldenrod tirelessly journeys without bound, seeing sights, setting down roots, experiencing the rush of the world and the quiet of dawn.

Adaptable, sociable, with sturdy stem not likely battered by breeze,  flexible enough to bend.  My hat is off to this charmer – pure gold.

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Weeds being what they are, most gardeners do not prefer them.  Weeds choke out growth, take precious water and nutrients, and shade out the good stuff.  Some people are like that too.

Emerson said a weed is a a plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered.   With Weedy people, this may also be the case.

My garden has many weeds again this year.  I did not plan for them – but there they are.  I am gardening today, and note the ease by which large weeds are pulled, roots and all.

Garden secret.  If weeds overtake, don’t sweat the small stuff.  When larger, weeds are easily seen, plenty of leverage to pull,  roots and all.  Their exit leaves space, nutrients, and plenty of room to grow.

Weeds.  People or plants.  Maybe they have virtues.  Being what they are,  I don’t prefer them.

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Warm day, weeds taunt, garden beckons.

Funny what you find in a spring garden.  Unrecognizable seedlings – could be volunteers, let them be.  The odor of musty dirt under edging – unrelated memory of the off-limits head shop in the basement of the used-bookstore a million years ago.

Under an elderberry I even found some self-respect for handling the conflict of divorce that continues to plague my household.  And here is some empty space – this year I will plant it full.

Working through a garden is working through a life.  Unbidden memory, new ideas, few regrets.  Though I garden for just this experience, I remain surprised by venues and vistas available simply by digging in the dirt –  expansive travel, exceptionally low mileage.  Finding what many travelers of a certain ilk find – that being far from home does not mean leaving it.  Wish you were here.

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What it holds

My garden is small, but it contains the world.

Few years back I took up the lawn and an extra gravel parking space on the south side.  Xeriscape and a few other things took hold – memorializes my western leanings.

In spring it comes alive, summer is lush, autumn – a microcosm of eternity.  Winter, snow covered, quiet but for the birds seed picking.  Throughout each season colors impossible,  jutting, drooping, soft and stiff textures.  Residue of human occupancy, nature of many types come to call.

To walk, or sit awhile here is to sink, to the small world, the leaves, seeds, and weeds, that are everything.

Leaves off the aspen grove, the hummingbirds and butterflies – jewels of summer – gone for now.   Distant memories of the smell of rich summer soil, baking heat, hidden shades of green, wood.  A child’s  perspective that small spaces hold so much – and they do.

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Mid-morning Friday on the loveliest autumnal day you ever saw, Mr. Saturday Night and a sibling emerged from stillness.

The bejeweled chrysalis that contained their transformation became crunchy, clear debris.  Organic artifact to changing times.

Home from school sick, my oldest and I marveled at the still-wet sheets of orange and black silken wings.  With such utterly different form, I could not help but wonder what those now-winged former caterpillars might be thinking, feeling – in their way.

When my youngest arrived home,  the jars were conveyed to the launch pad – a large Agastache plant in full bloom.  With a bigger body and wingspan than its cohort, Mr. Saturday Night fumbled a bit as they clung to flowers in the breeze.

Within minutes each butterfly flew up to a quaking aspen, it’s yellow mottled leaves of autumn offering perfect camouflage.  The two swayed gently up and down until dusk,  then disappeared into the garden.

As they moon rose and its siblings took to the sky, I brought the deteriorating chrysalis of Hunny Bear into the garden and nestled it under the milkweed plant upon which it was born, and once saw the sun, the moon,  maybe felt the breeze.

Butterfly number three emerged early yesterday morning, anxious to be off.  Born to run, there was no hanging around for him.  Crawling off my hand onto the launch pad, he was aloft and southbound in minutes.

This afternoon monarch butterflies, one, then two, gliding about my garden from time to time.  I have to smile.

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Monarch update.

Having passed a pleasant weekend in a sunny window, five chrysalis wait.

The sixth chrysalis, the last caterpillar to go, has turned almost black.  Although chrysalis darken  before emergence,  this change in colour is too soon.  It speaks of  process gone wrong and very likely a caterpillar not likely to make the leap.

His (or her) name was Hunny Bear, the youngest and smallest, and named so for the habit of oozling half-way out the air-holes of its jar.  Much like Mr. Winnie-the-Pooh, who became stuck one fine day in the Hundred Acre Woods, just astride Rabbit’s hole.

Cold nights prompt me to  cover zinnias in my garden, to ward off frost.   It is October now.  Given their instinct to migrate instead of mate, late summer monarchs live longer than those borne of spring.  If they survive, their life span stretches six months instead of six weeks.  Something to be said for moving on.

Today I saw a bright orange monarch trippling through.  Could not help but think of those waiting yet on the sill.   Only time will tell.

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Returning to our regularly scheduled programming…

According to Monarch Watch, overall monarch migration numbers east of the Rockies are down.  The autumn migration is underway with Mexico-bound monarchs just broaching drought-stricken territories in Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas – as the report put it, 1000 miles of hell – a nearly flowerless / nectar less and waterless expanse.

Our six intrepid adventurers remain chrysalis-bound as days grow shorter, nights colder, and nectar bearing flowers in my own garden begin to fade.  Emergence is expected within two to eight days.

Will these stalwart individuals survive their transformation?  Will  daytime temperatures and nectar supplies still support life when they do emerge?  Can they endure the journey south and navigate  inhospitable terrain to find their own kind?

…Wait, this sounds like life after divorce…

Stay tuned.

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Twilight is a favorite time.  The obvious recedes, ambiguity comes to the fore.

This year there are more fireflies than ever before.  Inclined to shade and shrubbery, it is only now my space is mature enough to host these bioluminescent marvels.  Their numbers are not great, but  enough.

It is well known fireflies blink to attract, a happier purpose than predation.  It suits me.

Fireflies delight with promised, but erratic light, and seemingly serendipitous flight plans.  Treasured for their mystery, they often turn up well away from where you might expect them –  much like the more wondrous things in life.

Were the light of a firefly constant,  as with sunlight, the refrain would reveal a  path.  Fireflies, fireworks and shooting stars reveal more the art of life – sudden illumination, a wish, a wonder, if sometimes only in the periphery.  Unexpected delight and quiet darkness left longing for more.

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