September usually is a great harvest month in Colorado and
having just recently returned to gardening after a two-year absence providing
cancer care, I was really looking forward to bragging this season. I was going to post pictures of a beautiful
abundance of ripe tomatoes, cucumbers, peas and beans, as well as show off late
season blooming flowers. But like cancer
treatment and care, sometimes the best laid plans must be set aside. Versatility is what is required, especially
here in Colorado.
As you can see, the pictures posted below do not boast of a
bountiful garden. Instead, they depict
the beginning of the end due to a month of hail storms. The last one in late August took out what
remained of the garden and also shredded and destroyed several beloved
perennials. I’m a bit ambivalent about
it all. Yes, I worked hard this year to
bring the garden back to life after two seasons of neglect. But I didn’t cry or throw a fit as I
helplessly stood at my patio window, watching Mother Nature batter her own
children into the ground. Really, what
could I do anyway? I’ve been altered
over the last two years – I’m just not the same person in so many ways. This is what the cancer of loved ones has
done to me – it’s made me calmer, quieter, more accepting of things I cannot
change. Cancer has made me appreciate
the brief beauty and small harvest my garden did offer this season. And as I watched the garden go under, I knew
in my heart it would regenerate next year.
That is the way of life. Come
early spring, I’ll be gung-ho and anxious to mix my hands in manure and
dirt. For now, I’m back to getting
manicures again.
And now off to autumn, which really is my favorite time of
year. I’ve ordered fall bulbs for both
my niece and me from an heirloom center where all the bulbs are
handpicked. They’ll be delivered in
October, at which time Christie and I will get back into the garden, however
briefly, until spring arrives.
Runoff from the late August hail storm directly in front of our house.
The retention pond next to our house began overflowing and we were under an early warning for flood evacuation. Thankfully our basement did not flood and Mother Nature calmed down just in time to prevent us from having to hike up the hill to get to drier ground.
There was so much hail in the retention pond the ducks had to walk on top of it. Ha ha!
Our yard was covered in hail
No, it's not Christmas -- it's just August in Colorado!
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