Thursday, October 12, 2017

Where the tiny things live...

evidence of a recent rain in a flowerpot
Today, I started the process of rehabilitating a long-neglected garden at a house near Beaver Island State Park. The garden was autumnal gold. A nearby wooded area had recently received a covering of leaves in various shades of yellow, green, red, and brown.

I dug up weeds and cut down the old, spent day lilies. Because of all of the rain that has fallen recently, the ground was soft, and the weeds came up readily.
The garden was full of worms and enormous slugs. Also abandoned snail shells.
The garden area that I worked on was big and had received no attention in years.
It was time to give that garden some attention so that, next spring, when the cycle of garden life is all about rebirth, there could be new plantings and a new life for that long-abandoned garden.


 I am taking part in The Write Tribe Problogger October 2017 Blogging Challenge  (Hyperlink this to: http://writetribe.com).   

#writebravely #writetribeproblogger

11 comments:

Nut-a-tut said...

Nowhere is the circle of life as prominently seen as in nature and a garden is a microcosm of that.

Rashmi's Space said...

Beautifully done Alice! I must say, i could smell the rain and feel the soft earth as I read. Your pictures gave life to your words and I now wish I could see the garden next spring! Thanks for sharing this :)

Reema D'souza said...

Its always satisfying to give new lease of life! Hope the garden blooms soon!

Parul said...

Is that community work? Wow! So kind of you to clean up the garden. The pictures are very natural. Good one, Alice!

sulekkha said...

The neglected garden will smile after a while, thanks to your efforts. I love talking to my plants in my terrace garden and some days they wave back.

Shilpa Gupte said...

Just today I did some gardening. My plants had been a negleced lot for quite some time now and I had been fee,ing so guilty. SO, today, I just got down to cleaning it all up, trimming the plants, sowing some seeds and adding some manure to the soil. And, it felt so good! Contented!
Lovely pictures, there, Alice!

Vinitha said...

We don’t have a garden here. When we were in the UK we used to spent time in the garden, though we were terrible gardeners. 😀 I want to get some plants for our patio but with the little one who runs around into stuff, everything is on hold for now. 😀

Vinitha said...

Nice work, Alice. I can imagine how good you would feel come next spring when the garden thanks you with new blooms. 😀

Unknown said...

I am sure that garden will bloom with beauties the coming spring.

Nupur said...

Alice I enjoy reading your blogs. Garden is a teacher. It teaches you important lessons - patience, joy and letting go.

Nidhi Garg said...

wow, Alice.... I can relate to it as My dad loves Gardening