For the past two years I have had the privilege of clearing her flag stone path through the middle of it. There is nothing like getting down in the dirt with long, slimy, worms and the fragrance of peppermint filling my nose as I work. Sweetpea joins me, picking the petals off the black eyes Susan's, studying the worms I dig up and helping bag all the grasses I pull up. She gets the sensual experience of weeding a path, she can probably see the fairy lands created under the ark of Iris stalks. My wish for our family is to have a similarly crazy, well attended garden. A small farm with plants that grow along side us. I want to find my unidentified wild carrot root, the one, like an old familiar friend that keeps coming back to remind me of this place. The place that I can call mine, the place that is home.
We are on this journey, finding a bit of land to tend for awhile. The tides of change are upon us once again and the red, shaken, earth of Oklahoma is calling. My dream is to plant fruit trees and tend them to maturity, to create an eco system that supports the little wild things of a city neighborhood. To be able to teach, learn and grow with Gaia. Every place I have lived in my young adult life has had a garden of some type. I want to see soil go past its two year mark in maturing and come to its own. I want to see the land bust out magnificent food for us to live on.
I will find my cherished root, I just have to keep believing in it.
A beautiful tribute to your mother's creativity and nurturing--a living embodiment of the goddess.
ReplyDeleteI loved experiencing the beauty of Victoria's garden, connection to nature and tradition.
ReplyDeleteIt is a beautiful garden and the neighborhood is lucky to have it!
ReplyDeleteI love your mom's garden. It's still looking fab! Get you some Oklahoman soil girl!!
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