The Year of
the Hibiscus
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Here we are,
smack in the middle of August, wondering how we got here already. Yes? As a
friend said, “What do you mean, August? It’s only June.”
Yes. June. I
mean, August! The days move along too quickly on their progression through the
equinox. You can feel the difference in the air, can’t you? It might be subtle
but it is there. The air has a different scent, a different brush against your
skin. A different energy.
Summer is
still with us. The signs of the season turning are here. For me, when I see the
signs, my mind skips autumn and turns to winter. It is one of my failings. I
love autumn and dread winter, even here in this sub-tropical land where
mornings can be quite chill.
The
three-month-long heat dome messed up a lot of expectations. My Haas avocado
tree died. My fig tree was set back, struggling. She’s a baby tree. While
standing next to her in the garden, I ate the only fig she gave. Oh, glorious
fig.
My mango
tree started with an early growth spurt, went into delayed reaction to extreme
heat for a month-long hiatus. Now, a month late, two month’s later, I’m
finished with harvest. My ever-generous papaya is doing the best she can.
All my
garden pots are cleaned up and resting. I won’t plant veggies, tempting as it
will be, until after I’m settled in my new home, probably near winter. So I say
today.
I mourned my
Magnolia. She went into severe decline, leaves burned away. Rains brought
revival; the lady is still damaged, not very pretty, but she is giving us her
first aromatic flowers. If I were to take you on a garden tour, many plants,
bushes, trees would tell you a similar story.
Our daily
rains, oh, blessed daily rains, no longer visit with regularity. The rainy
season is not gone and done, just slower, lesser, erratic.
Through
every change, through every season, the blooming hibiscus, well, blooms.
When I first
moved here, eight-and-a-half years ago, I planted hibiscus around the perimeter
of my yard. Like the bougainvillea, hibiscus takes seasonal changes in stride
and flowers through it all.
I planted
all colors. I planted many varieties. I’ve flowers of red, yellow, orange,
white, salmon, pink, solid colors and mixed colors. Some are the familiar
standard hibiscus you see in every yard. Some are exotic, doubles and ruffles.
One has three colors on one bush. One has variegated leaves. One has tiny
leaves but big ruffled flowers.
One, back when
it first opened a flower, made me ask my garden helper, Leo, “What flower is
this?” “Hibiscus,” he answered. “No.” “Yes, look at it closely. See how it
sticks out its tongue.” “Oh. It is a hibiscus.”
This year my
hibiscus trees or bushes, are more glorious than ever. Lusher, fuller, more
flowery.
If ever I
doubt life, all I have to do is look out my windows or walk around my yard.
Hibiscus, my ever-blooming hibiscus, assures me that life wants to live. Life
wants to live fully, to thrive, to flower in profusion.
Seems to me
to be a lot of parallels to our human lives in a garden, maybe especially a
garden under duress. Changes are not always welcome, often feared. We may want
to hide, to shelter in a cool cave. Metaphorically, we may need to push down
deeper roots or prune expectations, but we always have an option to try to grow
through the changes. So says my hibiscus.
Sondra
Ashton
HWC: Looking
out my back door
August 15,
2024
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