The roadside edges are filled with serviceberry, chokecherry and pin cherry blossoms. They thrive on the forest edges and openings where there is some open sun. Their delicate, dusty white flowers go straight to the place in the heart that remembers heart things. Loves unrequited, crumbling marriages, the heart can find solace in these early blooming shrubs.
The canopy is still thin with lime green quarter size leaves and the understory is alive with ephemerals: bloodroot, Carolina spring beauty, Dutch man’s breeches. Along the wet places, streams and run off and damp meadows, the marsh marigolds’ bright yellow flowers are the first real bright color in the woods
The tulip harvest is in full swing and the house is filling up with flowers once again: flowering branches, daffodils, vases of tulip seconds. Rounds of bouquets hit the grocery store. I always hope that having flowers in the house inspires other people like it does me.

I gaze at them on the table and marvel at the natural world, at flowering plants and how much diversity exists in the plant kingdom. The older I get, the more content I grow at being with plants. Just being in their presence.
In the landscaped gardens we’re getting into the swing. Soft earth, the weeds are easy, everything still feels manageable. A lovely time of spring before the bugs. We finish our spring cleanups and turn to our season’s projects; new gardens take shape and come to life. The winter
of planning becomes three dimensional.
We get loads of new plants for the nursery and high school and college graduations punctuate the end of May. Another reminder that we are getting a little older with each passing year. We acknowledge this fact more gently these days, as the mind slows down instead of speeds up at the frenetic pace that can accompany seasonal work, we try to find the ease in the labor, as we settle into the season ahead.