The garden also, can change the seasons themselves, signaling senescence during the bounty of summer or hope in the midst of frigid death. Last week, it was snow bringing hope, thick and wet, turning tan to white in an hour, leaving behind a frozen, windswept tundra to greet the next dawn. Hope is hard to find in such a scene, but I know, deep within, that a few days, a few weeks of this slumber, and the garden will awaken, refreshed with the moisture it was needing so badly.
This morning, this happy Sunday before Christmas, it was fog, cloaking the garden in mystery and calm, evoking the remnants of the color and joys of summer for a brief moment. I awoke to this solitude, neighbors vanished behind curtains of mist, a shy sun vainly attempting to assert its influence from behind the curtain, masked in glory. Could there ever be a more peaceful scene, a more expectant pause in the harshness of winter?
The garden, she sleeps, damp and warm within the clouds today. My strawberries, my beloved berries, wait for spring beneath a blanket of straw, in the arms of the shade house above them. And around, all around, the prairie itself hums with life hidden deep in the soil as roots hoard resources and renew, at the ground where chickadees search for the last seeds of summer, or in the air above where the hawks ceaselessly hunt. Life in the deer that sample the shrubs, or in the mice that tunnel under the snow, the prairie is thriving despite the cold.
All of us, the strawberries, the garden, the fog, and me, we all know that today is a respite from reality. Winter is officially declared and must have its time before spring pushes it to memory. There will be more snow, more shoveling to come before the Triggering that wakes up the earth. The snow last week passed in a few days, my temperate climate as always freeing the roads and soil to the rays of the sun. Me, I'm just thankful this season for this morning between, for this muted sunshine, for this life of plenty, this life in the garden.