Ohhh! I mentioned in an earlier blog how much I love lilacs. Because of our strange spring weather, the timing of plant life seems to be on catch-up mode. The lilac bushes have been stuttering with random blossoms, so I try to find even tiny clusters for a sniff before they are gone. I was mowing our yard and decided to take the riding mower down into a swampy area that has been too wet to cut. I wasn’t sure if I would discover the Minnesota version of the La Brea Tar Pits or emerge in one, albeit muddy, piece. As I was cautiously moving forward, brush and wild raspberry canes slapped at my face and legs. (No, I wasn’t cutting and killing the natural berry producers, just the ground formally known as a path. Honest.) As I was doing this cool ninja choreography of steering, pushing barbed branches away from already slashed skin, and trying to see how deep the tires were in muck, I noticed a beacon beckoning me. A few feet in, amidst the bramble, stood a wild lilac bush heavy with fragrant flowers. “For me?” I said to the wilderness. The surprise of finding it left me very, very happy. Scratched, but happy. It was the best part of my day.
Gates says
Hello!
Thank you for your concern and response. Perhaps it’s because I was raised on a farm, or perhaps it’s because I sometimes push the edge of good sense, but I felt I had to try. The path down to our creek has been a source of fun and frustration this year due to flooding. If I don’t keep it somewhat tamed it will get out of hand…kinda like my personality. 🙂 I’m happy to report that I didn’t get stuck, and other than the few scratches I mentioned came out of the bramble just fine. Discovering the mystery lilac really was a gift I wouldn’t have known about unless I risked the adventure.
-Gail
Harvey Pennie says
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Gates says
Thanks! We are all in this life together. Let’s have fun.
🙂 Gail
cruises from baltimore says
“To enlarge or illustrate this power and effect of love is to set a candle in the sun.” ~ Robert Burton