Monday, January 31, 2011
Winter Sanity-Savers...
After an extended delay, my Amaryllis has arrived (seen here, singin' show-tunes in my window). I like its (her) sense of timing after all; she's doing a fine job of chasing away the End-of-January Bleak-Monster.
That bouquet of flowering-currant twigs I mentioned in the last post is also flushing into bloom...with just a flush of pink. Not quite the rose-pink I was hoping for, but I am nevertheless impressed. The buds were fairly tight when I salvaged the branches, yet they produced a full drop-down blossom just sitting in a vase of water for 12 days. That's a lot of stored energy. There is absolutely no innuendo intended in the above paragraph.
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I have decided to amuse myself this year by experimenting with the "cut-flower-bouquet"-potential of whatever flower/branch/stalk/stem-bits I happen to haul home. The first test for prospective florals, of course, will be surviving wind-force on the back of a scooter. So I'm not promising fine florals. A bit more rustic perhaps.
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Bouquets sure do liven up a space. I suppose people have known that for years. Late bloomer here, ha ah.
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In the meantime, my keen observation skills and quick camera reflexes captured this image for BGC readers... (compliments of recent West Coast fusion curry/crab/sushi feast at Chiaki and Geoff's!)
I think the Red Racer Pale Ale logo is awesome, if unlikely. Reminds me of the B:C:Clettes--the Vancouver-based all-girl bicycle-show-dancing revue. Definitely worth a Google.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Winter Twiggery
Now's the time to keep an eye out for flower buds forming on early-spring-blooming shrubbery, and to whip out your pruners to snip a few branches to "force" indoors. Room temperature will fool their little buds into action and you'll get a spring advance. Most Forsythia, Prunus blireiana (the February-blooming plum with pink flowers before dark bronze leaves), and Chaenomeles (flowering quince), are generally of scrambly habit and won't miss a branch or five.
Below, I have a bundle of the flowering currant, Ribes sanguineum, on my desk because I was winter-pruning an overgrown schmozzle of shrubberies and had to give it a chop. I may be delusional, thinking I'll get a batch of those early carmine-pink blossoms, because this is a tad early. I can hope though. I'll know shortly.
In the meantime, I used a few Ribes switches to prop up my extremely reluctant Christmas Amaryllis bulb. At this rate, it will be a Valentines Amaryllis. I totally planned that :]
There is some colour out there and this Witchhazel cultivar, Hamamelis 'Jelena', down in the parking lot by the Beans at Park & Tilford, looks fluorescently spectacular in this photo, but people don't generally like it as well as the traditional yellow Witchhazel.
However, the yellow Witchazel (below) in the neighbouring P&T Gardens looks a soggy mess with its tenacious dead leaves so 'Jelena' is my pick of the day. I do appreciate the lacework branches of the hawthorne behind though. For all the grey of winter, 'tis the season of silhouettes and subtleties.
Here's a poem by Macrina Wiederkehr to remind us there's a season for everything....
The Sacrament of Waiting
Slowly
She celebrated the sacrament of letting go
First she surrendered her green
then the orange, yellow and red
Finally she let go of her brown
shedding her last leaf
she stood empty and silent, stripped bare.
leaning against the winter sky she began her vigil of trust.
Shedding her last leaf
she watches its journey to the ground
She stood in silence
wearing the colour of emptiness,
her branches wondering
How do you give shade with so much gone?
And then,
the sacrament of waiting began.
The sunrise and sunset watched with tenderness.
Clothing her with silhouettes,
they kept her hope alive.
They helped her understand that
her vulnerability
her dependence and need
her emptiness
her readiness to receive
were giving her a new kind of beauty.