Tuesday, February 08, 2011
taking home lavender
The cactus has finished its period of bloom. Time to pick up something else that will brighten a February morning. Typically I’d go for the daffodils that begin to show up in grocery stores right about now. But the daffodil has a perfect moment, followed by days when it looks sad and aging. Whereas a potted bloomer lasts. And perhaps will last some more on the windowsill of the farmhouse, come spring time.
I pass over the cut flowers and buy a potted lavender that’s about to bloom.
I forget that it’s cold outside. (Lavender, at least this particular strain of lavender, doesn't like icy cold.)
Really cold. Coldest of the cold days. And I’m traveling by bus.
I wait at the stop with a potted flower that's bundled in two plastic pastry bags. Hang in there, lavender!
Around me, I notice the snow piles, still high, still not entirely cleared around the bus stop, still, in places, burying fire hydrants.
What a winter!
I think about the little lavender and the sill where it will eventually stand, taking in the sun of a southern farmhouse exposure.
The bus comes, warm as always, I get on.
It’s hard to believe that in a month or so, I’ll be biking to work again. Not just yet though. Not just yet.
I pass over the cut flowers and buy a potted lavender that’s about to bloom.
I forget that it’s cold outside. (Lavender, at least this particular strain of lavender, doesn't like icy cold.)
Really cold. Coldest of the cold days. And I’m traveling by bus.
I wait at the stop with a potted flower that's bundled in two plastic pastry bags. Hang in there, lavender!
Around me, I notice the snow piles, still high, still not entirely cleared around the bus stop, still, in places, burying fire hydrants.
What a winter!
I think about the little lavender and the sill where it will eventually stand, taking in the sun of a southern farmhouse exposure.
The bus comes, warm as always, I get on.
It’s hard to believe that in a month or so, I’ll be biking to work again. Not just yet though. Not just yet.
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Before I read the description for the fire hydrant photo, I at first thought it was a man, sitting propped up against the snow; possibly a headless man...
ReplyDeleteI went outside this morning and saw that the kalanchoe was in deep distress. Here in southern California we almost never have to take in plants in the winter, but these two were nearly frozen, poor things. They're on my windowsill, recovering from the trauma of a very cold sunrise.
ReplyDeleteI grew up in New England, in a 200-year-old farmhouse without running water, heated by fireplaces. Your journal entries are bringing back lots of memories of frozen pump handles, buried outhouses, snow up to the second story windows. I can remember digging a tunnel through the snow to the woodpile.