Tag Archives: Plant Whatever Brings You Joy

Never Pull Up and Discard What You Cannot Identify

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Photo by Kathryn Hall

 

Readers of my book Plant Whatever Brings You Joy: Blessed Wisdom from the Garden will be familiar with this, one of 52 such metaphorical lessons: “Never pull up and discard what you cannot identify,” an invitation to not pre-judge that which enters your life that seems unfamiliar. “The Lord works in mysterious ways,” as we know. The blessings in our lives can show up in many different unexpected packages. So when I planted morning glory seeds in March on a rosy obelisk, well away from the rest of the garden, so it could not overcome whatever was growing nearby, I thought I was so clever both to get a head start, and to plant in a trouble-free spot. Imagine my surprise when what emerged were clearly not morning glories. For weeks I remained befuddled by what came up, and how, but the only “logical” explanation was that the morning glory seeds did not come up, but something that had lain dormant, waiting, did. But what? Reluctantly, I continued to water the mysterious seedlings, seeking patience, fostering curiosity, attempting to transcend my annoyance that my vision for my lovely blue flowers climbing the white obelisk was not to be. But what were they? For the longest time I didn’t have a clue. And then suddenly, out of the blue, I had a solid moment of surprised recognition. “I think those are hollyhocks!” I found myself thinking. Stunned. Incredulous. Hollyhocks? Two dozen in one spot? How could that be? I ran to the back of the garden and picked a large hollyhock leaf from my established hollyhocks, and ran back to compare. Indeed. Impossible to imagine, yet there it was. Identical. So the truth of the matter is that I planted morning glory seeds from my glass bottle of collected seeds from last year, still in their husks, some of them, and what emerged were a myriad of hollyhock seeds. Not a single morning glory seed among them.

For doubters (easy to imagine) let me assure you that I know my way around flat, round, dry, paperlike hollyhock seeds and hard dark morning glory seeds in their dry husks. No question. But there you have it. The only (near impossible) explanation is that I’d chosen a dry patch of earth away from the main garden, a place that never gets watered beyond rain, and beneath that seeming barren spot were the seeds of someone else’s long ago garden just awaiting that exact set of circumstances to take place.

Eventually the familiar buds appeared and then the mystery remained about what color flower would emerge. As fate would have it, they were white, the only white hollyhocks in  the garden (and nothing I would elect to purchase), further substantiating they had been someone else’s choice. I might imagine a bird had brought them in, had the plant not been so full!

This year they are back and even larger, so we will be enjoying another round of white hollyhocks among the pinks and reds.

So let’s ponder for a moment, shall we?  For I am writer who thinks metaphorically. What beauty, what gift, what treasure lies within you, or your children, or your spouse, or your best friends, or your students, invisibly, that is awaiting the perfect conditions to make itself gloriously known, adding to the blessings that surround you? This is something impossibly close, something you are apparently oblivious to. This gift would be content to lie beneath the earth for a long long time. It has no scheduled agenda. However, with the right amount of tending, of rain, of warmth, of sunshine, it might surprise you.

It is time, apparently, for us to suspend what we tell ourselves, what our natural expectations are, and to open to the possibility that all is not precisely what we think, how we see things. It might be different. Or better. Or unexpected. And a bigger outcome than we imagined. Better than we could have thought up for ourselves. It happens. What a miracle and blessing that the garden stands ready to remind us at any time.

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Kathryn Hall is the author of Plant Whatever Brings You Joy.  For more information please visit www.plantwhateverbringsyoujoy.com Books are available on Amazon, in Barnes and Noble and indie stores around the country.

 

 

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Wild Violets

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“Wild Violets” by David Anstiss (geography.org.uk), via Wikimedia Commons

In winter the gardener’s eye is scanning the landscape for anything and everything that will fill our enormous desire for the beauty to which we had been treated all summer and fall. Any sign of an emerging spring is trumpeted! And thus one is inclined to see what is ordinarily lost in the splendor of roses and hydrangea, of trumpet vine and forsythia. Attention now hungrily focuses on the humble wild violet. At least that’s how it is here.

I cherish this time of year as there is a large section of the front lawn that bursts with these tiny purple treasures and I delight in their beauty, fortitude, and resilience. But there was a time, I must admit when I had taken them for granted. Indeed, the only moment they really had placed themselves squarely on my inner radar was when I was researching butterfly habitat one summer, and made a mental note that the wild violet was hospitable to the eggs of the fritillary butterfly. I was glad to make note of their pragmatic presence, but a true appreciation certainly did not emerge. They remained in the background, lopped off when I cut the lawn. I did note they did resurface—and spread.

In the many years I have been on this property I have let the violets wander where they will. I actually welcomed them into the crevices between the flagstone pavers I’d put down in front of the rose arbor. I thanked them, and they obligingly spread their tentacles and took up even more room. Not a word of regret came from me. Hardly. My admiration only grew.

Charmingly, they kept a pinkish violet company which I’d purchased at a local nursery. (How did those escape the pot for which I paid good money, and become part of the natural landscape? You tell me!) Of course I assume the pink one is a hybrid. But the wild violet? How did it end up here? I have no idea. I only know it’s tenacious. I suppose that in itself answers many questions.

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Photo by Kathryn Hall

When at last the wild violets captured my curiosity sufficiently that I wanted to write about them, I began to research and was shocked and appalled and saddened to see how very many references were regarding how to get rid of them. “How to Remove Wild Violets from Your Lawn” was a common theme. They spoke of poisons, though even poisons apparently are not that effective. It apparently was more aggressive than even I anticipated. And the articles I found were discouragingly not what I was looking for. Not at all. My intention was only to praise their beauty and express my gratitude that they had chosen to live here and delight my days.

For violets suit when home birds build and sing,
Not when the outbound bird a passage cleaves;
Not with dry stubble of mown harvest sheaves,
But when the green world buds to blossoming.
~Christina Georgina Rossetti

Perhaps one reason violets so appeal to me is that I am completely enchanted by small bouquets. Violets lend themselves perfectly to this passion of mine.

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Photo by Kathryn Hall

When I finally wrote of wild violets and posted to the Net, I was amazed at how many people wrote to me around the country asking how to care for them, and where to buy them! Clearly there is far more interest in cultivating them than in destroying them.

With a growing emphasis in landscaping on varying our front yards to include far more than simply grasses, there is also a corresponding opportunity to introduce violets back into our environment. They are trouble free, lovely to see, beauteous additions to tiny bouquets, and if you mow them down, they don’t suffer, but simply return and continue on wherever they were going anyway.

What’s not to love?

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Kathryn Hall is the author of Plant Whatever Brings You Joy: Blessed Wisdom from the Garden, available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and indie bookstores. For more information please visit her blog at plantwhateverbringsyoujoy.com.

 

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