The trumpet
vines, the grasses, and the frothy pines
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One of my friends asked me how I felt when I came back to
the Rancho and my old home sat there empty of any aspect of myself.
That’s a hard question to answer. For one thing, I’ve been
so busy, focused on creating my new home, that I have little space in my head
for my old home.
Until I find a buyer, my old home is still my home. Maybe
all the ties are not cut. The good memories and all the love that place has
given me will never be erased. I hope a new owner someday will feel the same.
I’d still be there if the largeness of the place had not become too difficult
for me to maintain.
I like it that I’m so close to my friends at the Rancho and
we can easily visit.
I like exploring my new surroundings, meeting people in my
new town, my neighborhood perched way out on the edge, half-way up the
mountain.
I like my yard filled with new bushes and plants I’ve not
before seen. Take the yellow trumpet vine. I looked it up, found it, the yellow
Angel Trumpet. It is more a shrub than a vine with huge, footlong, yellow
trumpets hanging, bugle downward, serenading the earth.
One of my favorites, a mystery tree to me, has a pale green fragile-skinned
trunk onto which it looks like a thousand-thousand sea shells have been glued. Right
now it is not so pretty, mostly leafless, but in bloom has large pink flowers
with a peppery scent.
The other day Ana and Michelle and I climbed into the ATV
and explored the neighborhood, the adjacent tiny town of San Rafael, a huge
eucalyptus grove, and then continued down into the foothills skirting the
mountains. I felt great, getting out and exploring the countryside, learning
new terrain.
This country reminds me of the Bear Paw Mountains, only lusher.
It’s the same kind of country, the mountains and gullies similar but thick with
bushes, trees, flowers, and grasses. Oh, the beautiful grasses, tall overhead,
tasseled, and so many varieties. I have gathered grasses for bouquets, they are
that stunning.
I must tell you about the pines, the frothy pines. When I
first moved to Mexico, one of my early acquaintances was the coastal pines. They
are obviously pine trees. One can easily see that. But the pine needles don’t
look like needles, they look, well, fluffy, frothy.
I don’t know if the pine grove we landed underneath has the
same species of pine as on the coast. They look alike. Three of my friends
grabbed me the other day for lunch out at the Laguna Colorado. Prior to the
pandemic, this was a favorite place for several of us to go eat. Good food.
Great views overlooking the laguna, the water birds, the hills and mountains
beyond.
The place has grown up. When first introduced to us, the
first years, there was one eatery. Then two. And now another has sprung up, all
venues with good food. We went to the third, which might become my favorite,
situated in an older, well-established grove of huge frothy pines. The seating
is open air beneath the ceiling of pines, with lines strung from trunk to
trunk, each line crowded with hanging planters, some trunks wreathed around
with flowers. Oh, the orchids, the unbelievable orchids, growing wild. Who
could not like that!
So my friend, to attempt to better answer your question, I
don’t feel any sense of loss, but, more of a sense of what I have gained. My
domicile is smaller. My life does not feel smaller. In ways for which I have no
words, my life feels bigger.
Sondra Ashton
HWC: Looking out my back door
December 19, 2024
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