Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Time in the garden earns you points








When I was a kid my father used to have to threaten bodily mayhem if I didn’t get my ass in gear and “Get out and cut the *&%$#@ lawn!” Likewise, to suggest that I do a bit of weeding in the family plot was akin, in my bone-idle juvenile mind, to some of the shabbier directives of Simon Legree.

“Don’t you want our place to look nice?” my mother would ask, attempting to appeal to my more sensitive nature.

“Why do I care?” I would shoot back. “It’s your place, not mine. When I move out I’m going to get an apartment and then I’ll never have to cut the lawn or weed the garden ever again.

I was thinking such things yesterday when I was cutting the lawn. I was cutting the lawn because, aside from the fact it needed it, and I hate a shaggy looking lawn, I actually enjoy cutting the grass. It gives me time to think and to sort out all the problems on the planet our world leaders seem incapable of coming to grips with.

I must confess, I still don’t care for weeding. But, what I do care for is our garden. It is the result of an extensive labor of love. It is the fruit of an exertion on our part to turn a remarkably boring and uninspiring suburban backyard into something kind of park like. I think we succeeded. We have a rose arbor, and a fishpond and plants that are going insane due to surfeits of TLC. I’m not bragging, but it looks damn nice.

What was once just a mass of dreary lawn and patio now has walkways, and fruit trees, and other trees and shrubbery that the birds love, and flowers that the bees hanker after.

But, it’s not just about esthetics. It’s about, if I dare say it, spirituality. Working in the garden eases masses of stress and puts me in touch with whatever verities I subscribe to. Since I am a product of nature, I like being attuned in this way. The world seems more right when I spend time out there.

I look over the fence and my neighbor’s boring chunk of lawn an a few untended shrubs and think “feh! Why do you bother living in a house if you’re not prepared to put some love into your place?”

Am I a garden snob? Yes, I am. I don’t think we have the best garden in the neighborhood, but it is a contender. Am I competitive about this? Not at all. All I know is that in a world of disarray, if I can establish some soothing order in my realm, it makes me feel better about everything else.


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15 Comments:

Blogger Jazz said...

Whoa Ian, I am impressed. I'm the type who can kill a plant in less than three weeks, and more to the point, is not very interested in keeping it alive. Good thing I live in a third floor appartment and that the cottage is pretty much in the woods, which take over everything within a week or so.

I love pretty gardens though. Yours rocks.

1:44 PM  
Blogger Heidi said...

That's what I miss about apt living..No Garden

Maybe it's a good thing because I can't even keep plants alive..ugh!

1:56 PM  
Blogger andrea said...

This is the season here, isn't it? So green and lush. You have a beautiful garden. I must admit that, with 1/3 acre, I've been thinking "When I move out I’m going to get an apartment and then I’ll never have to cut the lawn or weed the garden ever again," too. :) Fortunately we have a 14 year old who needs spending money and can tackle the huge mowing job now.

3:01 PM  
Blogger jmb said...

It's funny how when it's your own garden the chores are not so burdensome.
I hated gardening when I was a kid too, but have loved it in my own house.

I think you have done a fine job of it. It does look "damn nice".

10:20 PM  
Blogger heiresschild said...

also, the difference is it's your house and garden, not your parents. your very own gives you a sense of pride, doesn't it? makes a big difference in your attitude, huh?

1:56 AM  
Blogger Janice Thomson said...

Oh Ian your yard is gorgeous...I can see the TLC in every plant...is that a bearded iris? Awesome coloring!

You CAN say spirituality for gardening gives all of that and more as well as a deep respect and wonder of Nature's powers.
Oddly enough I posted a poem this morning about flowers...

8:02 AM  
Blogger Hageltoast said...

beautiful garden. Want to do mine?

8:45 AM  
Blogger Annie Wicking said...

You have a lovely garden and the bearded Iris is beautiful.

Annie

10:15 AM  
Blogger Dr. Deb said...

What a beautiful, restful space. Love it!

10:30 AM  
Blogger Barbara said...

I completely relate to your memories of working in your parents yard and begrudging their efforts to encourage you- my parents used to pay me a nickel for a pail of plucked weeds (even back then, in the days of yore, a nickel didn't buy much). Now each year my Spring-induced passion for my own yard and garden is strong enough to pull me away from my studio and my passion for art-making ... however the carefully tended evolution of a garden is a work of art in itself.

11:59 AM  
Blogger elleeseymour said...

Gardens are never very interesting when you are a kid, you only appreciate them when you are older. I love my garden too.

12:27 PM  
Blogger Voyager said...

And a very lovely job you have done. I love gardening too, but time for it is hard to find.
V.

12:54 PM  
Blogger kimber said...

I've only recently come to the pleasures of gardening, and I find weeding, lawn-cutting, grass-watering, the whole kit and kaboodle, to be extremely relaxing. Very centering, and yet, good exercise. I love it.

Once the toddler stage is over and done with, I will be installing a fish pond. I've waited my whole life for a yard in which to have a pond, and that goal is so close, I can almost smell the murky water! :)

11:45 PM  
Blogger Wendy C. said...

Did the family of robins returned to your rose arbor this year?

9:13 AM  
Blogger CS said...

I am missing a garden this year - I have my containers but it isn't the same. And I love weeding - it's so meditative.

3:04 PM  

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