Tuesday, December 8, 2009

The Winter Garden


This is a tough time of the year for me. We’ve had our first snowfall and hard frost, so there’s not much left in my garden—just a little bit of winter jasmine.

I try to have something in bloom for as much of the year as possible but December and January are tough. I usually get a snow drop or two in January, but that’s it.

Friends who know of my passion for gardening sometimes ask if I’ve ever wanted to move to a warmer climate where I could have an all year round garden. Not an option. Not only do I love my city, my house, my friends, I don’t think I could live without the drama of Summer, Fall, Winter, Spring.

I’m sure that I would never burst into tears of joy at the sight of the first species crocus (usually in late February) if it weren’t for several months of ice and cold. Now maybe that sounds a little crazy—wanting the pain of winter to fully experience the joy of Spring, but that’s how it works for me. And then Philly winters aren’t all that bad; it’s not like I’m living in Maine.

I’ve tried to figure out why seasonal change is so important to me and I think it has a lot to do with growing up on English literature. My imagination has been shaped in a really deep way by all those references to seasonal change. Bits and piece of poetry pop into my mind when I am out in the garden. Right now it’s “bare, ruined choirs where once the sweet birds sang.”

And the Holidays for me are a Winter Solstice festival. I just can’t imagine the holiday season without cold weather and at least the possibility of snow.

The way I make sense of the world is bound up with seasonal change. Sure some of it may seem clichéd—e.g., the autumn of my life—but it’s powerful nonetheless.
Karen Bojar

3 comments:

  1. The crocuses peeking up with their purple smiles through the detritus of a Zone 7 winter garden make me teary, too. It's a miracle :-)

    Holidays once I left Chicago for Northern California and now the desert Southwest just aren't the same... they sneak up on you while you're still wearing shorts.

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  2. I’ll take seasonal change over endless sunny days, but all that sun shine must be wonderful!

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  3. Take a glimpse at Vicki Reggie Kennedy's op ed piece voicing her late husband's sentiments on health care. Two quotes from Kennedy are ""can't let perfect be the enemy of good", and " better to get half a loaf than no loaf/

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