The Growing World
When I was eight, Grandma Clara initiated me
in her wild side yard garden, a raised bed eye-level,
fronted by a composite wall embedded with shells
and colored pebbles the sun gleamed. A tangle of small
shrubs, annuals, biennials, perennials, bulbs, some in pots
on top of the wall, others in hanging baskets that swayed
above me. Amazed by all the shades and shapes of stems
and leaves, textures, and colors of petals. The sequence of bud
to bloom to seed. She’d say their names, some gifts from friends
who traveled—Mrs. Wong she did seamstress work for, who gave
her a parakeet. In the front yard she grew leaf lettuces near boxwoods,
pulled off a leaf for me to taste the tender-crisp, the sweet liquid pulp.
8 thoughts on "The Growing World"
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I love how the lines grow longer and how rich and varied the details are.
Thank you, Gaby!
I really enjoyed the images here. So lyric and balanced.
Thanks, Shaun!
You were blessed by your Grandma with your incredible eye for nature. Thanks, Karen
I love that this garden was wild! You made me see it all!
Thanks, Nancy & Kathleen.
Everything is nice about this–the images, the sounds, the litany of growing things! I also love nature, as you know, so I am relating to this easily.