Agastache 'Red Fortune'
seeking attention in my garden
True, with the release of my garden book, (Grace in the Garden: Thirty Years of Blunders and Bliss) I've been working on a few publicity opportunities. And I've still got my day job to keep me otherwise occupied until I get home in the evenings.
But when evening comes and weekends arrive, I'm IN THE GARDEN.
Several years ago I wondered if the gardening bug was losing its grip. My feelings about it had turned blase' and I didn't give a hoot about color echos or compost. I can't remember exactly what occupied my busy mind back then. It might have been while I was writing my first book.
Fortunately the garden waited for me. It grew, of course. And it was a muscle-straining endeavor getting it back into at least a semblance of order.
In my book Grace in the Garden, I liken the garden to an attention-seeking toddler who tosses her spoon on the floor just so the reliable caretaker will reach down and pick it up. Then she'll throw it back on the floor and on and on. Just like that little darling, the garden is an attention-seeker. It purposely does things that force the gardener to get out there and tend to it. I think it just doesn't want to be alone.
Silly as it may seem to the non-gardener, I'm happy to say that I'm enjoying the call, sore muscles and all.