Tag: spring
Petals Glow
Warmth and light transform
dark sausage to bright flowers.
Magnolia opens.
Glow ~ Pic and a Word Challenge #367
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Spring Sequence
Flowers first
when cherry trees wake.
Leaves later.


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Skunk Cabbage
Deciduous Trees
Lifeless? No, leafless.
They hold their breath all winter,
exhale leaves in spring.

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Crocus & Pachysandra in 3-5-3
Golden glow
with purple and green.
Spring returns.


Golden ~ Pic and a Word Challenge #306
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Warmth and Light
Warmth ~ Pic and a Word Challenge #255
Spring
After the winter,
green plants spring back to savor
warmth and longer days.
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Sky Sights and Sky Sounds
Sky Circles
Riding the spring wind,
hawks with still wings and shrill cries
claim territory.

© Steve Byland | 123RF Stock Photo
A lot happens in the sky.
Hawks stake claims.
Clouds sometimes imitate clams.
Daffodils …
… were her favorite flowers, so cheery and dependable in early spring.

I scattered her ashes among daffodils.

Carpe Diem #1402 Daffodils (one-bun)
Stained Glass in Spring
Carpe Diem Theme Week (6) 5 “Ask Jane …”

Stained Glass in Spring
Leaves and seeds glow as
sunlight nourishes new life.
Cathedral window.
Deciduous
Deciduous
Lifeless? No, leafless.
Trees hold their breath all winter,
exhale leaves in spring.
Confluence
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I took my favorite photo of my late wife Edith in 1981, long before she showed symptoms of the disease that would dominate our lives in the current century. Alzheimer’s. I cared for her in our own home as long as possible; I visited often during her final years in a nursing home. This post is about one aspect of the endgame that may be helpful to others in a similar situation.
In Edith’s childhood home city, the Ohio River emerges from the confluence of smaller rivers. Three streams flow together at the end of this post. Please bear with me.
- The plantings around our house were few and scraggly when we moved in. Over the years, I planted trees and shrubs while Edith planted bulbs. Lots of bulbs. She was especially proud of the many kinds of daffodil, blooming at various times thruout the season. Long after she stopped gardening, she enjoyed the flowers every year.
- When Edith was in custodial care but still aware of who and where she was, the saddest moments came when she said she wanted to go home. I distracted her as best I could, never said anything to indicate that her condition precluded that, and never said that I would “go home” when it was time to end a visit.
- Many years ago, we had seen ads for cemetary plots, discussed what was and was not a good way to use land, and decided that we preferred cremation. When I began considering specific arrangements for Edith in 2014, I found that there are astonishingly many styles of urn available online. Stardust Memorials had one that would have pleased Edith as a vase for a bouquet of her daffodils. Packed carefully and shipped promptly, the urn was ready when the dreaded phone call came.
“Are you ready to bring Edith home now?” The funeral director’s question at the end of the calling hours brought me a sense of relief. She could come home at last, in our own car. While she waited for reunion with her favorite flowers in the spring of 2015, I began what eventually became a trilogy of haiku.

Widower’s Song #1
|No haiku can say
|how strange this is: her journey …
|ended before mine.
Widower’s Song #2
|Warm earth welcomed her,
|ashes among daffodils
|she planted and loved.
Widower’s Song #3
|Ghosts do not haunt me.
|Remembered joys can often
|overcome regrets.
Update [2017-01-15]
In response to Sometimes Stellar Storyteller Six Word Story Challenge:
I scattered
her ashes
among daffodils.
Spring from Another Viewpoint
I consulted the plants in my yard for my first response to
Carpe Diem Special #194
A Trip Along Memory Lane — with a twist,
but I did not consult my plants this time. They might be shocked.
Spring from Another Viewpoint
One fat little bird
welcomes spring in its own way.
Cherry buds are food.
Spring
Carpe Diem Special #194
A Trip Along Memory Lane — with a twist .
Spring
After the winter,
green plants spring back to savor
warmth and longer days.



