MY COMEBACK ROSES
We have a garden
and I have become, by necessity, a gardener.
Our move to the country to a house with over an acre of land meant some
gardening had to be done. With books, a spade, and the knowledgeable voice of a
local nurseryman we plant shrubs, grasses, flowers.
dirt under my nails
I trade pink polish
for peonies
sweeter and longer lasting
than any manicure
Success with
daisies, phlox, black-eyed susans, irises, spirea and many shrubs and annuals
have swelled my head. I’m a gardener! I’ll plant roses next. Pooh on all the
doubters who say they are hard to grow. The roses do well that summer and
survive the harsh winter, leafing up
beautifully in the spring. Then, catastrophe. The leaves are full of pin holes
and getting brown. Buds are shriveled. Aphids! That's what the nurseryman tells
me. I go on the attack, spray heavily
and wait one week. Two weeks. One morning I see new leaves growing. By mid-July
new buds have formed. I spray again and wait.
a rose bouquet
sprinkled
with morning dew
in bare hands
ignoring the thorns and pricks
and fresh drops of blood
Haibun Today, June 2017
6 comments:
What lovely tanka prose. ;-) And beautiful photo.
Thank you, Janet
Adelaide
Dirty,
as fingernails
scrape room for these new seeds,
fresh blooms give rise to my next prompt;
a launch.
Grand and thoughtful verse, Adelaide!
__ Thanks for the -launch- into this 'humbly, harmonic Cinquain'. _m
Thank you, Magyar, for posting your cinquain and your comments.
Adelaide
As a gardener, I can relate to this! This post is another example of doing something you love, and the poems will come. Beautiful roses, by the way!
Thank you, Sandy. I wish I could do more gardening, but age and arthritis has slowed me down.
Adelaide
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