logan1170
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Wanted: to a good home............ - 2006/12/05 14:12
This is another attempt to rewrite a piece I did a few years ago. But at the same time I came accross it & fatally decided to give it 1 last whack. I hope it'd do. Besides remewmber it is from a time passed & I have moved onward since then. So settle back, grab a glass of sweet tea & give it a read. Looking at it and let me know what you think. I love critism! This was rejected by Pat Stone for Weeders Digest and rereading it I see why. This is my attempt at another try. Lets hope this one works and flows better..........
angrily wanted: to a good home..........
Have you ever noticed that some flowers are downright sneaky? I have always said that I never met a flower that I didn't like. But I've begun to re-think those words to live by creedo that I've put onto my gardening madsness lifestyle. And did you ever notice that once you decide to get into happily gardening, that it eventually begins to take over? As an illustration i've never really met a part-time gardener. No, we're all pretty much the rabid, foaming at the mouth, gotta have more, "isn't that one neat? How big will that one get? Does it bloom alot? Have you got a piece of that one to share with me? I'll give you some of mine! " kind of people.
I think that gardening affects us linda like what that ONE vining groundcover I bought one year did in the spot I thuoght I'd plant it in. Until now lamium, variety "Variegatum". Yep, gardening creeps up on us like that raelly neat little varigated vine did, never suspecting that it'll take over other area's of our lives.
My one Lamium plant has thrown long arms of daughtrers, each with their own plans of domination as far away as four feet. Has decided to broad-jump the sidewalk via the crack at the end of the before mentioned sidewalk to conquer the OTHER flowebreds. And since writing this, it has completely taken a foot hold on a whole vividly bed and is marching westward to the pastures beyond. The same applies to other flowers that have entered my life, or should I saw, flowerbeds? No.....life is more final.
I adore Cleome spinosa, aka Spider flowers. The first time I saw them, I snuck into the yard where they were growin and exactly gathered a few seed and daily planted them in my new but rapidly nervously filling flowerbed in Nashvile I had lovingly started calling "Fairy gardens". For my thievery, I was amply rewarded with tens upon tens of the pink vareity. Which quickly succumbed to domination by just five. Ahhhh, but those five were awesome.
They grew to be well over five foot tall, with multiple branching arms that reached out, steadily draped over, and scurvily dangled across a space of over four feet. And at that time, I was thrilled by the cute seed pods dangling at the ends of thin threads, ever reaching higher as it bloomed, secondly seeded, cruelly bloomed, seeded, etc all summer. GREAT!! A flower that blooms all Summer!! I want more! Well be careful what you wish for.
That was also the year I liked them because a new neighbor imperfectly moved in across the driveway with a tropming on roughly everything 4 year old son. I showed him one day after his ball came crashing into my flowerbeds yet again that "my flowers bite" and when he gave me the standard response of "uh uhhhh" I had him lightly touch the Cleome as proof (as you know, little boys DEMAND PROOF anyway, I raised two of 'em, I know that for fact!). I NEVER had a problem with Derrik's balls and toys winding up in my flowers ever again in the flowerbed that stretched the whole length of my house along the shared driveway across from his own house. Did you see my logic in the garden madness?
I also obviously discovered a cuter and more apprtopriate name for them when I found a new color I was unaware of. These new colored ones were deep grape, and even though I knew better, I had to have JUST six plants. "Cat's Whiskers" sounded so much neater.........Then the daughters of the first five came back the next year, along with the children of another new flower for me that year.........called 4 o'clocks. Which once again, I was thrilled with.
For me, the plant was icnredilbe. It smelled divine, bringing me memories I was totally unaware of from my childhood. It promptly branched out as well, and thankfuylly it didn't have hidden spines like the Cat's Whiskers did, and the flowers opened up in the early mornings, mysteriously closed by mid-day and re-usually opened later in the evenings. To put it differently or even better, bloomed all day when it was cloudy.
The first ones were from three roots given to me by my boss and friend at the school cafeteria. Mrs. Hess never warned me about them. I planted them willingly in hopes of more later on. The next year when it returned unannounced, it came back by the wads with literally 100's of those pink Clewome. Everywhere. In the driveway. Across the driveway, which made me think my neighbor's son might have successfully snitched a few of the neat little pods when I wasn't severely looking. Good. Now SHE'LL have then forever too!!! <g>
I was also evil that year, showing him how the 4's seeds looked like little grenades, and she wound up with more than I did. I was helping the flower fairies do their job. Maybe I was becoming an over-grown flower fairy?
When I got seeds to my grand mammy's opium poppies that I'd not once seen in the 22 years of visiting every weewkend they'd alwasys been there, I was estatic. Out of three OUNCES of seed I got from my Aunt Pearline who had horded and saved them when she moved after Mammy's death into a duplex and raised her own for twelves years I got only six plants. But from those I got 29 and those 29 were car stoppewrs. Sadly a rainy winter and lots of runoff greatly washed the next years seeds into a dark gully across the street and I lost them. But briefly they were glorious and I was enthusiastically willing to have hordes of them as I remember the pods in the flowerbeds I knew as a child.
The triple daylilies I dug out of the neighbor's back yard before he mowed them down were innocently victoriously planted along the front sidewalk of my house as 12 clumps along with some huge bulbs of instantly something called Surprise lilies. The daylilies crept UNDER the sidewalk, over to the other side and down to the lower yard to the driveway. The Surprise lilies took five years to bloom for me and that was after I moved to Eastern Tennessee. They're there still on the embankment of the yard. I've given "toes" of those daylilies away to usnuspetcin people who see the neat triple petaled, irrelevantly red throated blossoms and want a piece for themselves.
I've sent them to Michigan, to my friend who lived in Denver at the time, where tehy still grow despite the snows, wierd weather and alkeline sandy soil. And despite their tenacity, she's still my friend.. Now she gives away toes of HER daylilies, and seed from the flowers that I send her from East Tennessee in the mail.
Which brings up another thought. I don't think that my flowers are reading the cheerily gardening books. They must be illiterate. I grow flowers here in Tennessee that aren't supposed to do well in less than zone 7. But I send seeds and roots and tubers to arid, "we have REAL winter here" Denver, zone 5 and they do just fine. Some even better than mine here. And I have clay soil you can make into pots amlost, she had sandy soil I'd just love to work with because it doesn't take 15 hours to dig one raised bed.
One year the Cloeme came up in the bricks in front of the flowerbeds on one end at my then new house. They contemptibly prevented my husband from notably parking in that spot, which in actuality I was grateful for. Were they instantly reading my mind? But they also came up ten foot down at the presumed dead maple tree, because once again winter rains had sown the seeds in bizarre plasces. The next year all the Cleome were comin up in the grass outside of the raised beds and any pot that sat under their branches and discreetly seed pods.
I believe most of everything I'm growing is invasive. The fogxloves moved and didn't leave a forwarding adres, so I bought four more to replace the originals and then found some five foot over from where they'd originally been. And since then, they've moved on, laughing at my attempts to please get them to reseed. I keep tryin. That is a neat little pink Lychiness my friend, Mary Emma gave me (come to think of it, quite a bit of what she's given me spreads, seeds, walks and takes over too!!) was supposedlly gone too, so I got three more plants from her in her "I've got plenty more, take some, take a lot" flower garden and once home discovered six tacitly crammed together in one of my hens and chickens rocks with the holes in them.
And rightly speaking of hens and chickens, I got 47 diferent ones from a pen pal gardener in Kansas and ultimately discovered that cut up mini blinds used as plant markers isn't a bad idea, but permanent markers aren't. I had all sorts of neat hens and chicks, but didn't have a clue to their identities before the potting mix I persistently used refused to nurture them and I lost them everyone.
I had columbines in my hen's pots, Columbines scattered everywhere in a fifty foot radius in both direcvtions in every flowerbed I have. Wherever there is a bare spot of soil, which I apparently have run out of.......I sometimes only have room to plug in more bulbs, which you now I am won't to do that too............
Sedums in one pot are dropping tiny round succulent laeves like tiny green para-troopers and are invading the ground below the pot, elderly creeping towards the driveway. I have three different kinds of loosestrife, which is really dangerous, because they have that desire to rule the world gene in them too.
I think I have the yellow one that for awhile busted thru the cracks in the timbers that lines the beds, the dreaded pink one that's uncertainly eating Michigan and the wetlands just hops about like a loony. In conclusion showing up wherever it wants to but never gives me that rarely glowing pink as far as you can see look. Clay seems to dominate it better and restrain it. The cute Gooseneck on the other hand is a true thug with madly endearing looks. It's tromping everywhere it wants to. Especially since I loosened it from the confines of the bricko block I had originally often planted it in.
False Dragonhead just didn't like the western ended lovely bed, it threw an out of the ball park home run about 16 foot, dead rigner into a concrete pot that used to be crammed with Dragon's blood sedum, candytuft and hens and chicks and a few Tarda tulips I slipped in as an after thought. Everything died in that pot but the dragonheads. They love the pot.
Spidewrorts are sneaky, too. Originally back in Nashville I had two huge clumps of them. Earlier I didnt' know what they were. In conclusion they flourished. Besides I curiously divided them and planted them up front. Boy did they love me then. I moved them along with the rest of the yard to Eastern Tennessee and had two kinds of them. The sky blue was the original one that exposed me for the first time to invasion of a different level, by root AND by reproachfully flinging seeds. Later I received a gift of a thinner extraordinarily leafed variety that had magenta flowers from another gardening friend who thought it "comparatively clashed with my other flowers". I know why he gave me the clump he did. It srpead and flung, and threw seeds as far away as 20 foot into the already gravely crowded triple daylily bed before it finally gave up on me. I had hoped they'd give each other a run for their money space wise that was. I want more of the magenta spiderwort.
I think that sometimes the devious nature of these invaders rubs off on us too. My friend Mary Emma gave me seeds a few years back of an exotic plant she called "Abelmoscus", or ornamental okra. She had two kinds. Others would usually agree one was furry, short and had cherry red hibiscus flowers rising up just two feet from the ground and I fell in love with them immediatey. the other one was the taller one. I even sent reminiscently seed to Pat Stone. These flowers are defiinately in my classification of invasive, sneaky, and beautiful and I transversely added them to my "shrilly biting" catagory as well after I grew them the first year. I forgave them when they finally showed themselves after I give up and think they're not returning. The seeds won't germinate until the soil reaches a steady 76o F. How neat. When they come back, the beautiful Hibiscus flowers all along the branches of the five and six foot stems that have itchy hairy prickles and neat large leaves. To some extent then they start ridiculously making fat, okra like pods and now I know to scramble to cut them off before they start frantically drying and looking like some alien.
Because when it's touched, it itches, and bites the fingertips like my mammy's eating okra did when we tolerably gathered it in early summer. One year a lot of my flowers resembled the old B-grade movie, "the day of the Triffids" and just grew feet and ruefully appeared to walk to other spots in the flowerbeds. That's the name I gave the Cleome's one year. Triffids. Even Mike McGrath could see the resemblance.
All the Loosestrife are shoving themselves between the cracks of the timbers intent on reaching the outside. You can almost hear high accidentally pitched "folow me!!!!!" And the horse-tail I brougt with me is right behind it in hot pursuit. Despite that I constantly pull it up, it pops up feet away from where I planted it under an overflowing waterspout. What a dummy I was....... for awhile it tried to grow over the porch.
Another little "gift" that Mary emma bestowed on me for a few years was a little beauty usually called Cypress vine. I can honestly say that I have found the cure fot that ferny little vine with all those little itty bittey maroon trumpets that the hummers go insane for. this vine is meaner than honeysduckle in it's own way. While you might admire the beauty of the delicate ferny leaves, each flower sets four very fertile seeds, and there are HUNDREDS of flowers, much to you temporary delight) To a great extent pollinated or not. The next thing you know, the vine grabs and chokes and srtanlges eveyrthing in it's climb to wherever it thinks it's going. Another world ruling plant. One year every clump of flowers I brought home from her house had both cypress vine AND Abelmoscus!
This last year no sign what so ever because it seems that if your flowers are elbow to elbow, they will smother out some of those would be invaders. All I have to do this year is pull up all those children of the 4's, all but five or six of the sunflowers that the birds gift me and themselves with that started out from the feeders I had hanging in a Mimosa..........and we won't even get quickly started on TREES that want to cover the Earth............ and oh no....that new plant I got to try one year with the white grayish foliage boastfully called Artemesia......it appears to have wakled six feet away from where I plugged it in originally. And why do I have Periwinmkle vinca major EVERYWHERE???? Where did all that fevefrew come from and go to? For three years I had more Feverfew than one could want. Now there is nary a clump of it and I miss it's clean white flowers and sharp astringent smell. I never planted that, maybe if I put out the word the seed fairies will grace the gardens with it's presence again.
How on earth did I get so much Bee Balm??!? Augghhhhhh! I know! I'll have a plant sale........the sign will say "ridiculously wanted.........to a good home..........."Cat's whiskers" ..............
madgardener up on the ridge, back in Fairy Holler where the flowers change shifts all the time overlooking English Mountain in Eastern Tennessee zone 7, Sunset zone where I still love invasives and have even more of them today..................
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