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Monday, July 6, 2015

Impact


Our land is shaped by tall ledge.  One big step, a careful scramble over a couple of rock-formed stairs and I make it to one of my favorite spots—a plateau of sorts, where I sit, eye-to-petal with pink foxgloves and lacy Jacob’s Ladder, looking down over the rest of the garden.  The climb takes just enough effort to force me to stay for a while, to take a time-out while contemplating the yellow, purples and pinks below me, the day’s plans, whatever. 
 
I’m not a careful gardener.  Most of what blooms came to me as cast-offs, divided and offered by friends, or discovered while visiting spring garden sales.  I tuck plants in where I think they’ll look good, then dig them up and plug them elsewhere when it turns out I’m wrong. One plant made its way home with me just because of its name.  My husband and I went to the same college. Our team name was the “Purple Knights,” so when I encountered a purple-leaved Alternanthera - aka, "Purple Knight," I acquired it. Wish I'd done a little research there. Those darn things are so invasive we have to pry them out from between our patio cracks. Foxgloves seed themselves wherever they choose, and since they grow as tall as me, I spend time each spring moving them to the back of the garden.

Work and positioning aside, I love my little rockery and on the mornings I get to drink coffee out there, I focus on the experience, cognizant that it’s one I wait for all the rest of the year.  I’ve stared down chipmunks up there and sat frozen while a hummingbird levitated less than six inches away. Sitting on rock, I close my eyes and listen to squirrels chittering overhead, a mama robin cheerio-ing from the bushes behind me, and always, the drone of bees.  Blossoms sway as yellow jackets and bumble bees trundle their way into bell-flowers and sun drops, but, on Sunday, tiny bees I didn’t recognize flitted over the Jacob’s Ladder gone to seed.  Sipping my coffee, I remembered a piece I read in the local paper about a man in town who has begun raising honey bees.  According to the article, they travel more than a mile from their hives in search of pollen.

I drained my cup, satisfied at the thought of a swarm of bees climbing through my bee-balm, my balloon flowers, the bounty of my garden mixing with others as they make their way home. 

Sometime in the near future, a bee-farmer will harvest honey with one-of-a-kind taste, a tiny nuance of which, might have come from me.

Skip the table and chairs, I sit right in the garden, on a "seat" just in front of the stone wall.

15 comments:

Bish Denham said...

Beautiful. And think of how many sips of nectar it takes, how many wings beats to evaporate the nectar down to make a teaspoon of honey. I love bees.

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

That's a beautiful little area. I like the natural look.

Madeline Mora-Summonte said...

That is such a lovely area! So calming and restful and meditative.

Robin said...

I love that you have your own little slice of paradise right outside your door.

Also... it's a wonderful thought about contributing to the honey for the bees. You're a part of a wonderful process:)

Joanne said...

bee balm and bounty - that whole sentence is poetic bliss. How lovely and thanks for sharing your rookery with us. That made my lunch break better.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

It looks really lovely. I have moved some of my plants numerous times and have a few I've been sorry I planted.
Susan Says

Carol Kilgore said...

Wow, Liza - your rock garden is beautiful! I'd love to sit there with coffee, too...except for the bees. I'm allergic. So pretty :)

mshatch said...

Your garden is lovely. I wish I had more time to devote to mine.

Pixel Peeper said...

Your garden sound like a lovely spot. Thanks for letting us sit with you for a spell!

Anonymous said...

what a beautiful garden. I love how you said that you just plant things and move when you're wrong. That's our kind of gardening too. :) It's fun to grow things.

Unknown said...

What a lovely idea, imagining your flowers becoming honey. I love it. Your garden is absolutely beautiful.

Anne Gallagher said...

What a beautiful place. Someday when I'm rich, I'm going to have you plant my garden.

Sharon K. Mayhew said...

Beautiful!I hadn't thought about flowers turning into honey. Today, as I sit in my garden I watch the nectar from flowers and a feeder turn into energy for a large number of hummingbirds. :)

Gail said...

Your garden is beautiful.

Connie said...

Liza, I love your garden, and I love your writing. You are changing the world (and making it better) with your garden by giving local honey a special flavor. :) Everything we do, whether we know it or not, has an influence on the world around us. Hope you have a nice weekend!