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'Morden Sunrise' |
Yes, friends, it's that time again.
That cursed time of time change, Daylight Savings to Standard, welcome to the world of waking at 5:00 a.m. while your body thinks it's 6:00. That world. ProfessorRoush
wishes a face-melting pox on all the mealy-mouthed politicians who promised that last year was the last time they would confuse our biorhythms and increase our statistical chances of heart attacks and car accidents in the next week. Oh, wait, another promise from the same people who promised us 2 weeks would "flatten the curve" and save us all from COVID? More's the fool, me.
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'Heritage' |
My garden has seasonally shifted color and mood as well. Two weeks have taken me from the last two roses pictured here on October 17th, to completely bare trees and the tans and umbers of autumn. It seemed like it was overnight, one sudden drop into the mid-20ºF ranges and the world died, trees suddenly bereft of leaves who seemed to have come to their senses and dropped
en masse, morphing their supporting structures from clumps to skeletons before I could prepare to mourn the change. I'll bet the spider on this 'Heritage' was just as dismayed as I am.
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'October Glory' |
However beautiful the maple, it's a hard moment for a gardener to go from the sunny tones of 'Morden Sunrise' to the purple-red of 'October Glory' without warning. This red maple is the only colorful tree still holding leaves, the strutting rooster among a few oaks clinging to leaves the shade of mud and dust. I can turn from the computer and see it out the window, there in full sun, a beacon calling from my yard to the horizon.
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Euonymous alata |
The only match for the maple is my burning bush,
Euonymous alata, who finally, after all these years, is reaching the potential that I saw for it. This bush has been in its spot for two decades but never before this colorful, usually stripped of its leaves by winds and rodents before I can notice it. It beckons me further into the back yard, calling me to its side, where the subtle oranges and yellows of the viburnum beside it on the right promises more subtle pleasures.
I'm resigned to winter, waiting for the first snowfall, already tired of the lack of life in the garden. And yet this morning I planted hope, hope in the form of these bulbs and corms, small patches of color to march with Spring as it returns. These crocus and puschkinia are now planted on either side of the driveway entrance, where they'll be noticed if the prairie winds don't pulverize their petals before they can appear. It's an act of faith, this planting, for I planted a like number of crocus in the same spot last year, only to see just a few poor specimens survive to bloom. Perhaps the waxy puschkinia will do better is the heartless prairie winter. My garden, an experiment in patience, continues.....
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