I welcome you to join me, if you like! I've divided the prompts by month, and the plan is to respond to 3 (or so) a week. For some of these I may write poems, for others prose. The important thing is to mine my memory. Who knows where this exploration will lead?
In January I wrote about: apron, bar, basketball, bed, bicycle, birthday, boat, broom, button, cake, car.
In February: chair, chlorine, church, concert, cookbook, couch, dancing, desk, dessert, dining room table, diploma.
In February: chair, chlorine, church, concert, cookbook, couch, dancing, desk, dessert, dining room table, diploma.
Here are March's prompts: divorce, door, dream, emergency room, envelope, eyebrows, first apartment, first job, food, game, garden.
*I'll be taking a break from this project during April, so I can focus on my 2019 National Poetry Month poem-a-day project: ARTSPEAK! Happy.
GARDEN
First, I should mention that I wrote a whole book inspired by my grandparents' garden -- FRESH DELICIOUS: Poems from the Farmers' Market.
And I wrote a whole cycle of poems in 2016 -- ARTSPEAK! Plant. Grow. Eat! So gardens have come up in my writing quite a lot.
My
parents subscribed to Mother Earth News and made attempts at
self-sustainability while we were young. This included beef cows,
pigs, rabbits for food -- and the subject of some awful can't-shake images; dairy cows for milk; vegetable garden for
produce.
So yes, there were gardens. But it was my grandparents'
garden that grows green in my memory. They lived in Port St. Joe
where the soil isn't so much soil as sand. It's hard to grow anything
there without a lot of water, fertilizer and man-hours spent weeding.
Granddaddy and Grandma didn't mind. Or if they did, they just put
their heads down and did what needed done.
I have quite a few
pictures of Granddaddy standing in front of various crops. He loved
to grow Silver Queen corn and Better Boy tomatoes. He also loved
yellow-meated watermelons. Many afternoons I'd sit with Grandma on
the concrete back porch steps, her with a giant stainless steel bowl
of peas for us to shell or beans for us to snap. Her fingers were
long and thin, like mine... and knobby and wrinkly-soft-- not like
mine at all. She was gentle with the vegetables, in the way we are
all gentle with things we've helped create. She didn't take a single
bean for granted. Thanks to her Depression-era childhood, every
single one was important. There were no throw-aways.
my kind of garden - the kind that plants & tends itself! |
My
mother has given over vegetable gardening for flowers. She loves
roses best of all and beams when the roses are flourishing and is
bothered when they are not. She says gardening is good for her soul –
she loves the dirt, the sweat, the work of bringing something up and
making the world more beautiful. Meanwhile, I appreciate a garden,
but don't want to put in the hours to make it happen. I don't enjoy
the heat or the sweat or the dirt under my nails. So I opt for
low-care, native species in my own yard and marvel over the efforts
of others.
I have
been thinking lately that I want to create a fern glade in my shady
back yard... and also a small chapel built into the slope overlooking
the lake. AND... I want to hire someone to create a mural on the side
of the RV shed. Flowers, maybe? Or a landscape of misty mountains? A farm scene? I'm not sure yet. Thinking...
That's funny that we both posted about gardens today! Your fern glade and chapel ideas sound cool. A mural is a lovely idea, too. Maybe if you figure out what colors you want it to have, the subject will follow. xo
ReplyDeleteInteresting how different times ask for different priorities. I still wonder how my grandparents managed all that they did with gardening and prepping for, then canning. My mother gardened some, mostly the main things like tomatoes & lettuce, but bought from farmers and froze corn on the cob, etc. I love hearing about a mural for your shed. What a delight it would be.
ReplyDeleteMy thots are as follows...
ReplyDeleteHow I'd looooove to dance with you
at the Wedding Feast Upstairs...
Coming ..??