Haircut Day at Mi Casa
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Rainy season
has arrived early. Hooray! Hooray! Evening rains revive this parched mountain
valley. Trees tilt their sombreros when I walk by.
When one
hasn’t seen rain in nine months, the typical gestation period one might think,
each raindrop is a birthing. A renewal. New life. Figuratively and literally.
And I laid
claim to my Baby Rain, took credit for bringing it about all by myself. I’m
human, okay? It may sound silly but it is the way I felt, wet, standing out in
the rain, drenched by my baby, laughing.
Gardening is
different here in central Mexico. Pruning plants to keep them within bounds is
a constant chore, just less frequently necessary in the dry season. But knowing
the rains are here leads to thinking, “We need to hack this stuff off now,
stuff like the Plumbago hedge and the ferns.”
We, my
garden man Leo and I, had let the Plumbago hedge along the entrance wall go to flower.
This shrub dresses itself with a profusion of blue flowers. When the branches
get rain-soaked, they fall over, blocking the walkway. When trimmed regularly,
and this shrub grows out of bounds quickly, the plant makes a lovely green
hedge.
I am rich
with a hedge for Plumbago flowers in back and a greenery hedge in front.
Trimming the
Plumbago led to hacking the potted ferns down to a flattop hairdo, led to whacking
back the vigorous Wandering Jew, all of which grow like weeds on steroids; once
planted, watch out!
“Everything
is getting a haircut, Leo,” I said, clippers in hand while trimming one of my
favorites, something like a cousin to asparagus fern. “I should go to town to
have Lorena cut my hair too.”
My hair,
born with a mind of its own, responds best to short, wash and wear cuts. I’ve
been whacking it myself during the entire pandemic. Poor hair. But as my Dad
always said, “The difference between a bad haircut and a good haircut is two
weeks.” If only that were true. It
worked for a couple years until my head got to the point I wanted to shave it
and start fresh.
Leo said, “I
drove my car today so I can take you to town if you want. Or I can ask Erika if
she’ll cut your hair.”
Well, I
didn’t know Erika cut hair. She’s a multi-talented woman. She’s got to do
better than me. So I wrapped a towel around my neck and Erika pruned me in
short order, pun intended, out in the courtyard between the Plumbago and the
geraniums.
After Erika
finished my hair, Leo and I continued pruning, whacking, weeding.
Sadly, we
had a death in the family. There is a shrub with multi-colored leaves of such
beauty to make you catch your breath. It grew here possibly twenty years or
more. This winter, the poor thing struggled to keep any leaves, and, in naked
humiliation, finally gave up. So Leo whacked, sawed and dug the skeleton out of
the ground.
Pre-pandemia,
I would have made a trip to Vivero Centro to buy a replacement plant. But for
the past years, I’ve simply been splitting or moving around what I have on
hand. I had been wondering where to put the hollyhocks I had planted in a
bucket from seeds Michelle gave me. Well, here it is, a sunny spot, now vacant,
perfect for hollyhocks. Thus proving (to me) my belief that to make room for
the new, one has to clear out the old.
Gulp. That’s
a grim thought. This “Old” got pruned today but when will she need to be dug
out and replaced!
Whoa! That
sounds severe. Hopefully I have a bunch more trimmings before The Master
Gardener cuts me off at the roots! I’m having too much fun.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
June 9, 2022
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