Hangin' Out
This is the season of stiff cloth: towels and
pillowcases, undies and sheets; socks and face cloths. On sunny days, windy
days, warm days, we hang the laundry on the clothesline; one sharp snap as one
takes the dry items off the line will loosen and soften some of the pieces –
and this is an important action because it removes stray bugs that have landed
on the hanging clothes – but it won’t soten up facecloths, for example, and we’ll
wash our faces with extra-rough cloths
all summer and fall.
It’s also the season of damp pants pockets, because one inevitably forgets to turn the pockets inside out when hanging them on the line. No problem ; they’ll air dry or body dry in half an hour.
Do, however, be sure to check that the hummingbirds didn’t poop on your pillowcases on their way to their feeder. They do often use the empty line to perch and sing, after all.
This is a perennial I planted last year and lost the tag; does anyone know what it is? It's about 5 feet tall now and going wild...out of control like everything in my life at the moment!
This is also the season of critter experiences. There has been a fox or two regularly hanging out in our yard; sometimes near the wood stacks and last night, we watched one greedily chomping down the unripe small peaches the Husband has been dropping on the ground when he thins them from the still-young trees. This spring, apparently, produced an amazing number of peach blooms, which makes up for last year when there was late frost killing them all. My trees, however, are still only a few years old and small; they won’t be able to hold up so many large ripening peaches, so the peaches must be thinned or we risk broken branches later in the summer.
I can’t imagine what flavor or nutritious interest hard green peaches provide, but I’m not a fox. Maybe they gave it a sick tummy; around midnight what I assume was the fox was racing about our house, especially in the heather in the front, then to the back, then towards the marsh across the street, back to our house, front and back and then, rapidly, away in the back woods, heading towards Eddie Bear’s house and towards the house of the Polish Poet Witch on the Hill. My cats were very agitated, racing from window to window to get a look.
I peered out and couldn’t see; putting the front door light on didn’t help, alas. The night before, I heard the hoo-hoo hoo hoo hoo of the barred owls that live somewhere nearby; and I’m pretty sure I’ve also heard the screech of the rehabilitated barn owls that were released in our back yard a few weeks ago. Our back yard is actually one end of the old cow pasture our house sits in the middle of, with a dirt road and many acres of lightly housed woods behind.
Today is July 4; I was surprised, last night, not to be serenaded by firecrackers or small fireworks, which usually light up the night in my small village; but no neighbors were celebrating early this year, apparently. Tonight we’ll likely be able to glimpse the display put on by the next town over, if we stand outside and peer above the trees.
This summer, like last, my orchids are having a vacation out on the porch, all but the one that’s currently in bloom – the wind has been to brisk, too often, to risk losing those lovely and rare flowers to the weather’s strange vagaries.This summer, because my injured foot and leg (6 months now, and counting, and only seemingly getting worse) won’t allow me to plant the big vegetable garden I usually plant, the major part of the garden is going wild: it’s a jungle of daisies and California poppies and milkweed and strange weeds I don’t know, and large weeds I do know; it’s rather lovely in an irritating way.
Before my injury got too bad, I managed to plant the two raised beds just behind the house with leeks, onions, shallots, beets, parsnips and a row each of peas and fava beans, all of which are being challenged by self-seeded calendula, mats of purslane, yellow-flowered wood sorrel, and other weeds. I can’t easily weed things out – it hurts to stand out there and I’m putting my weight mostly on my left side, so when I bend over to pull weeds and reach too far, I often lose my balance; twice I’ve fallen into the potato-growing bags, once in a way I had to shout for The Husband to come help me get up.
The Tall Man has planted some beds behind the garage and near the apple tree for me – I have to visit those by driving the car through the field because I can’t walk that far without great pain. The Husband put in a bed of sweet peppers, and a small bed of green beans. I’ve put basil, and the gladiola bulbs, in pots near the porch stairs; ‘twill be pretty if all grows. The Tall Man is watering the garden for me. If the garden gremlin/gnome leaves things alone, I’ll have some vegetables this summer, but I won’t be able to fill the freezers as well as I do most summers.
The Husband is having a CT scan tomorrow to see what his first 3 chemo sessions (and the Japanese tumor-reducing tinctures made of various mushrooms I prescribed) have accomplished; he’s a third of the way through chemo, which will be followed by one or more operations to remove tumors. He’s doing well, strong and busy, with some weird side-effects – things don’t taste like they should, touching cold things hurt – and sometimes he doesn’t sleep well, but he’s a famous insomniac so who knows if it’s chemo or just him.
I’m almost embarrassed to say I feel sorrier for me, at this point, than for him: he can walk comfortably, he doesn’t lie awake night after night in great pain, he doesn’t topple over or lose his balance every few steps, and he can drive without his foot shrieking at him continually. And he’s never had to have a foot wound debrided - I held my foot up, I didn’t flinch, I didn’t ask for a break, I only shouted FUCK FUCK FUCK three times (I sound like the pet duck in Louise Penny’s books about Inspector Gamache a lot lately – the duck is carried around by the semi-insane old poet who lives in Three Pines, and says fuckfuckfuckfuck) because I’m a Warrior. And then I had excruciating pain for the next three hours. I’ll feel sorry for The Husband later.
And so the summer goes. We’re surrounded by piles of leftovers from our yard sale, that go here and there slowly. I make endless lists and schedules, and then make them all over again as schedules change and we juggle having only one car because the other’s still dead; and we build up gratefulness for friends who have been helping above and beyond.
And it’s summer; and Buzzy Boy, who must be a very old hummer, is back; and he still chases me out of the garden beds I can reach if I venture out in the late part of the day.
The whole world feels like it’s coming apart at the seams; our personal world is barely hanging on. And yet there are owls, and foxes, and loving cats, and Buzzy Boy and his harem. And understanding patients; and generous friends.
The world goes on…
For the blog: herondragonwrites.blogspot.com July 4, 2024
All photos Debra Marshall
Green Man overlooks the garden; looks a lot like The Tall Man |
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