rumbles and rain

frilly edged green leaves of alchemila mollis, with pearls of water balanced on them as if by magic. A few strands of the fine elegant grass, stipa tenuissima, are seen in front of them.
alchemy
Softly uniform pearl grey, the day
creeps in under the lost horizon
and shades of green peak in bright yellows,
aching to catch the first strands of gold
that will turn cradled dewdrops into
tiny fairground mirrors; the moment
comes and goes. A silent wren darts back
to the privet as distant rumbles
change the nature of expectations.
The cat abandons it’s casual
indifference; elegant, lolloping
with intent, its semi-urgent gait
leading to the open greenhouse door.

translating the secret garden

a winding brick and cobble pathway through an arch of greenery; mostly Fatsia Japonoca, but also bamboo and pine
secret garden

 

I start and end my day with pen and paper,
my garden translates black and white on the page
and, in the early morning sun, words demand
expression as I hasten to pin them down
abandoning pen in favour of finger
and thick creamy cartridge paper in favour
of the slippery-smooth touch sensitive screen.
In the evening, when the white garden beckons
and I relax my gaze, the pen doodles and
scribbles it’s way from quality paper to
torn envelopes, blank corners of bank statements
and the backs of old shopping lists. All the while
knowing that as dusk cools the heat from the day
fat little bodies creep out of hiding to
party and feast on the juicy greenness of
abundance that, perfect, delights my eye and
tattered into spikes and fragile lace ribbons
spurs me to a merciless performance of
squashy, squelchy-green, crunchy executions.

poetic leaves

close-up of a large green leaf of Fatsia Japonica with pearls of rainwater, against a background of garden greenery
fatsia in the rain
Early morning rain, a waiting grey,
expressively silent blanket on
birdworld, collects and dribbles from the
poetic leaves of my overgrown
fatsia. Each spring I assess the
growth, the space, the possibilities,
wrestle with ‘to prune or not to prune’
the question stretching out over time;
the fatsia stretching fledgling leaves
out over the secret garden path.
Late, I chop the emerging dragon
wings, guardians vying with spears of
samurai bamboo to conceal, not
close, access to a privacy of
green clipped box, black strappy lily-grass
formal seating that collects heat in
drystone walls and yet devolves to spread
fairy tales of fleabane and toadflax in
recurring mists of white nigella.

magpie rhetoric

A green tangle of lily leaves with eight buds in different stages. The flowers are white so the buds get paler as they get closer to opening. On one just opening flower sit two flies, one quite delicate the other chunky with a glistening green thorax.
tangled lilies
Dawn chorus, even to my ears, has been hijacked,
corvid chorus being the more appropriate discription,
harsh, with the occasional plaintive
interruptions of small sorts and short sharp bursts
of magpie rhetoric; to this a warming sun hauls
a lazy fireball into a colourless sky
clear of cloudy interruption, quickening blue
in glorious promise. Sudden silence prompts
my own progress into this new day as I reach
for pen and paper, my own morning exercise
routine to trace out the tiny details of green
abundance, to record the gentle solace of
order in chaos, and the surprising chaos
in the gentle order of manicured tangle
that it daily pleases me to call my garden.

garden larder

Bug house made with wood, bricks, fircones, logs and hollow stems arranged in layers. The waterproof roof is a shelf for small terracotta pots and the whole thing hides between ferns, lily-of-the-valley and laurel hedge
Bug house or larder?
They alight in unison, fluff and without pause
or hesitation, the fledgling, still eager for
treats, begs; and the male, the skinny and bedraggled
parent bird, leaps away to forage in the hedge.
Brown, softly speckled, unlike the orange-beaked, black
adult, the juvenile yo-yos between the urge
to preen new feathers, or open the prodigious
yellow gape and wait impatiently for service.
They tweet each other and multi-tasking, the young
bird topples, takes alarmed flight, swiftly followed by
screeching parent with tell-tale empty, grubby beak.

peony path

a curved gravel path lined with spent peopnies and and pointy box cones
The peony path is lined with an avenue of box cones.
Cones that lean, windswept in higgledy piggledy directions
give shape in the winter landscape when the peony retreats
underground; cones that shelter the peony from frosted snow,
hide its ability to power out of the earth red shoots
that erupt in bold green hand-spans and spectacular  scarlet
blossoms. Right now the peony path is a carpet of red
dashed to the ground by wind and rain leaving three-pod seed cases,
orange and hairy, like strange-plant versions of Orang utan
Pongo Abelii, exotic in cool northern summers,
arching away from their roots and bowing low to the earth.

lost hosta

 

badly chewed hosta leaves with strong purple highlights against a black background
haunted hosta

 

I have lilies, or rather I have amazing long strong stems,
with bustling lengths of elongated, yet broad, neatly tipped leaves
topped by clusters of fat buds I watch hawk-like for holes or worse
And worse rears it’s ugly prospect in the shape of two humping
lily-beetles; candy-red demons oblivious to my
vigilance. The weapon of mass destruction comes easily
to hand, the beetles tumble put of sight, their usual trick.
And I survey my stumpy spikes of lost hosta, lacy pale
remnant of munched  brunnera, chewed to the ground memory of
lupins whose fabulous foliage never once stood a chance;
fritillaries, glaucous green promises stripped naked,
and I have no regrets. Enough is enough. The war is on.

miniature monsters

Two small multicoloured mosaic lizards,  crawling down a white wall

Like a lizard, I sit soaking the heat
protected by the feasting green
of jungle and the factor fifty that
glistens on my more fragile skin.
The heat prickles on my surface and creeps
slowly into my winter-cold bones. I
listen gratefully past my tinnitus
to the merciful strands of birdsong
that hang just above the fence, but far
below the watching crows; and I watch
a small world of miniature monsters
conducting their own fragile ecology
in the semi-alien environment
of my jungle, eating and breeding on
my treasures; eating and breeding on each other.

seed story

foxgloves cropped small

I found a packet of seeds, forgotten under a pile
of unwanted post. Initial disappointment displaced
by curiosity, I checked the sow-before date and
could hardly believe my good fortune. I know I purchased
too early, had such trouble restraining the urge to
get started months ago, but there is still time
and two years before they might no longer be viable.
Tomorrow I shall clear a fine tilth bed for them. I can
hardly resist the urge to creep out in the dark to
prepare; one packet contains one thousand seeds;
imagine the miracle concealed. More impressive
than prayer on a pinhead, a starter pack and all the
information needed to inform the production of
a glory of digitalis purpurea alba,
all this times one thousand, in a tiny silver packet.

star plant

single head of white cup-shaped astrantia bloom seen against a background of bright green shuttlecock fern and deep shade
astrantia

 

 

 

 

 

 

I kneel before my green jungle
amazed that all this spring rain has
rebirthed plants I imagined dead.
Intricate Mandelbrot workings
lace a verdant tapestry of
hope, planted, each one, with eager
expectation of perennial
visits, green shoot reminders of
days in the sun. Pushing its way
through new spring brunnera is the
delicate fern that failed to thrive
two, three years past. Lone clematis
my last best hope for success, now
racing its way skyward from the
bare brown earth of its premature
dying in that summer drought.
And astrantia, brilliant
sight between dark arches of
Solomon’s Seal and a fine pale
shuttlecock fern, it lives and with it
my hope and imagination.