Such oblivious creatures, we Homo sapiens, we naked apes of tools and dreams. We trod through millennia, intent on food, shelter, and water, occasionally motivated to art or to walk on the Sea of Tranquility, yet unknowing of the intricacies of the surrounding world, incapable of recognizing life on different scales than our own. Civilized human-kind conveniently forgets the constant struggle of life at large.
ProfessorRoush has spent the past few days capturing flower photos, digitally preserving the blooms of 2018, as happy to welcome summer as an otter discovering a brisk stream. I was seemingly, in fact, entranced this week by honey bees, happy to see them out and about, thrilled to know they haven't all disappeared into extinction. A noon walk to the K-State Gardens on Thursday brought me green tranquility and the simplicity of the bee above, ensconced on a single bloom of Rosa eglanteria. Later, I was drawn into the massive bounty of a full-grown and trellised 'William Baffin' and enticed further into the blooming mass (at left) to capture another industrious worker strutting around its food source.
At home that night, however, I was starkly reminded of the dark side of bee life. I had just noticed this motionless and soundless bee on 'Polareis' and began to look closer when it suddenly moved beneath the flower, all without wiggling a wing or leg. Perplexed, I changed my perspective and exposed the true tableau, the bee expired and in the grasp of a victorious crab spider. It is tempting at such times, to judge the spider as evil, but more correct to recognize merely life as it is, sometimes brutish and quick, unaffected by how we wish it to be. I suppose the spider has its own reason to exist, just as the bee. It's just that I like to root for the bee.
This is the real life of my garden. I think only of flowers and prunings, mulch and plant combinations. To the bee, each flower could be nectar or death, each flight from the hive success or oblivion. For the spider, each day may bring feast or hunger, no guarantees beneath the sunniest skies. I've forgotten again the drama beneath, the life of a garden in constant flux, predator after prey, ultimately death for all.
Now reminded, I still am rooting for the bees.
Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Friday, May 18, 2018
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Never Go Away!
'Buckeye Belle' |
'Prairie Moon' |
'Scarlett O'Hara' |
'Buckeye Belle' 05/13/2018 |
'Buckeye Belle' 05/14/2018 |
A gardener should never go away during growing season. In temperate climates the first two weeks of January might be safe, in a really cold year. Might be safe. But otherwise, forget it. The other 50 weeks of the year there are things to be done, plants to check on, and beauty to behold.
Sunday, May 13, 2018
Garden of Eden; Complete w/ Snake
What a difference five days can make in a garden! Mrs. ProfessorRoush and I left for a trip last Wednesday (May 9th), and returned tonight (May 13th). Before I left, Tuesday night, I took a photo of this Paeonia suffruticosa (Yellow Tree Peony), which had just opened its first bloom of the season that day. The remnants of that first bloom are visible at about 2:00; tonight the petals of that bloom are already faded and gone, and now every other bloom on the peony is open. Temperatures went from the 60-70ºF range last week to several days of 90ºF+ this week during our absence. Wait all season for a brief glimpse of peony heaven, and almost miss it during a five-day trip!
For an added bonus, look closer at the bloom at the 7:00 position in the photo above. See my little friendly neighborhood garter snake wondering who was disturbing the garden aura? How about a closeup (at left)? I had only seen my first snake of the season last Monday as I was cutting down a grass clump and a green snake went racing away too fast for a picture (in its defense, I was racing away in the opposite direction). Now, already, I've run across my second snake of a still-early season. Going to be a slithery year, I think.
The entire garden seems to have exploded over these 5 past days, and I think I'll catch up on my blogging and introduce you to the current bloomers at about two day intervals this week. Tonight, however, I'll leave you with this tantalizing photo of 'Harison's Yellow'. Before I left, only 5 days ago, not a single bloom was open. Now, all of them are. And to think I almost missed it!
For an added bonus, look closer at the bloom at the 7:00 position in the photo above. See my little friendly neighborhood garter snake wondering who was disturbing the garden aura? How about a closeup (at left)? I had only seen my first snake of the season last Monday as I was cutting down a grass clump and a green snake went racing away too fast for a picture (in its defense, I was racing away in the opposite direction). Now, already, I've run across my second snake of a still-early season. Going to be a slithery year, I think.
The entire garden seems to have exploded over these 5 past days, and I think I'll catch up on my blogging and introduce you to the current bloomers at about two day intervals this week. Tonight, however, I'll leave you with this tantalizing photo of 'Harison's Yellow'. Before I left, only 5 days ago, not a single bloom was open. Now, all of them are. And to think I almost missed it!
Sunday, April 15, 2018
That's It, Nothing Else
I'm afraid that this is all I've got to show for a weekend in the garden. These two simple photos represent my dual accomplishments for two days, a weekend of miserable weather and attention to a single-minded dog. In fact, as far as how my garden goes, these are my accomplishments for the whole week, since I worked during each day and I was too ill during most of the week to want to go into the garden in the evening.
The first photo is how I woke up from a nap this afternoon, to a closeup view of my constant pestering pooch, the lovable Bella, at my side, wondering if I'm ever going to rip the Frisbee out of her paws and throw it over the balcony again. I don't know how long she had stood like this, patiently waiting for me to open my eyes and play. But, for the four-hundredth time this weekend, I indulged her canine compulsive disorder and tried to muster enthusiasm from lethargy.
The second picture is my Star Magnolia on Saturday morning, shivering in the early morning 40ºF temperatures as they prepared to plunge to the 30's by afternoon and an overnight low of 26ºF. When I looked at it later, I was surprised at how the marvelous light softened these blooms even in a simple iPhone camera. I would show you a third photo of how these beautiful blooms looked this morning, but I can't because I wasn't willing to venture into the 40 mph wind gusts to get it. Truthfully, I don't also don't want to chance anyone jumping off bridges at the desolation. I'll just leave it by saying that the magnolia, appearing like a heavenly cloud yesterday from my dreary landscape, now appears to be a bare bush adorned with brown tissue paper. Used and disgusting tissue paper. A few of these, and other magnolia blooms, brighten my kitchen today because I decided to save a few from the cold, knowing that the rest would perish.
My consolation prize is that I was able to write this blog while listening to a tribute on POP TV to Sir Elton John, his greatest hits sung by famous vocalist after vocalist while he is forced to sit in the audience. I'm singing along to songs from my teens as poor Elton is held captive to his tribute, probably thinking about how the singers are mangling his songs. I'm mangling them too, the lyrics written on my soul, memories springing forth along with each verse, lifting my spirits at the end of another lousy winter day in the midst of spring.
"And I guess that's why they call it the blues, time on my hands, should be time spent with you."
The first photo is how I woke up from a nap this afternoon, to a closeup view of my constant pestering pooch, the lovable Bella, at my side, wondering if I'm ever going to rip the Frisbee out of her paws and throw it over the balcony again. I don't know how long she had stood like this, patiently waiting for me to open my eyes and play. But, for the four-hundredth time this weekend, I indulged her canine compulsive disorder and tried to muster enthusiasm from lethargy.
The second picture is my Star Magnolia on Saturday morning, shivering in the early morning 40ºF temperatures as they prepared to plunge to the 30's by afternoon and an overnight low of 26ºF. When I looked at it later, I was surprised at how the marvelous light softened these blooms even in a simple iPhone camera. I would show you a third photo of how these beautiful blooms looked this morning, but I can't because I wasn't willing to venture into the 40 mph wind gusts to get it. Truthfully, I don't also don't want to chance anyone jumping off bridges at the desolation. I'll just leave it by saying that the magnolia, appearing like a heavenly cloud yesterday from my dreary landscape, now appears to be a bare bush adorned with brown tissue paper. Used and disgusting tissue paper. A few of these, and other magnolia blooms, brighten my kitchen today because I decided to save a few from the cold, knowing that the rest would perish.
My consolation prize is that I was able to write this blog while listening to a tribute on POP TV to Sir Elton John, his greatest hits sung by famous vocalist after vocalist while he is forced to sit in the audience. I'm singing along to songs from my teens as poor Elton is held captive to his tribute, probably thinking about how the singers are mangling his songs. I'm mangling them too, the lyrics written on my soul, memories springing forth along with each verse, lifting my spirits at the end of another lousy winter day in the midst of spring.
"And I guess that's why they call it the blues, time on my hands, should be time spent with you."
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