“We hear you, fellow-creatures. We know we are wrecking the world and we are afraid. What we have unleashed has such momentum now, we don’t know how to turn it around. Don’t leave us alone, we need your help. You need us too for your own survival. Are there powers there you can share with us?
I, lichen, work slowly, very slowly. Time is my friend. This is
what I give you: patience for the long haul and perseverance.
It is a dark time. As deep-diving trout I offer you my fearlessness of the dark.
I am caterpillar. The leaves I eat taste bitter now. But dimly I
sense a great change coming. What I offer you, humans, is my
willingness to dissolve and transform. I do that without knowing what the end-result will be, so I share with you my courage too.”
JOANNA MACY
The Dutchman's pipe vine pictured above is my very favorite of all native vines. The pipe shaped blossoms are just so interesting! When the plant specific insect, the fungus gnat, comes to the flower, it gets temporarily trapped inside until it is thoroughly dusted with pollen. Slowly the flower relaxes and allows the gnat to escape and to spread the pollen. The vine itself is easy to grow, and grow it does each season. Once well established it can use pruning. The meager plant here does not seem to grow as fast as I remember they did at MuRefuge. I have planted an additional two very small plants purchased from California Flora Nursery in Fulton. I do so ever hope they will flourish here and grow into robust vines covered with flowers and fruit. I am looking forward to when the Pipevine Swallowtail females lay eggs on the leaves so I can watch the caterpillars gobble up the leaves. Below are pictures I took of the entire event of egg, caterpillar, to butterfly while living at MuRefuge.
I am looking forward to viewing the entire process here as well. It is such an extremely astonishing process to be hold! "May it be beautiful before me. May it be beautiful behind me. May it be beautiful below me May it be beautiful above me. May it be beautiful all around me. In beauty it is finished. In beauty it is finished." NAVAHO CHANT It is beautiful all around us here in Cotati and in fact everywhere we drive in Sonoma County. It is Spring with a vast array of flowering bushes, trees and perennials. where Shasta often walks with her "Dads" in the morning. |
Oxalis stricta (common yellow woodsorrel) is an ubiquitous weed found in almost everyone's lawn or garden here in Sonoma County. |
This picture was recently taken at my acupuncturist's in the West County. |
Manzanita bushes are in full bloom all around the county. Some have pale pink flowers while others have pure white ones. This is one of my very favorite native bushes! |
Each Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings I pass this stunning display of rosemary cascading down a wall in the front yard of a home which is atop a gentle slope. |
The deciduous Magnolia trees are flowering. This one is white but I pass on Shasta's and my morning walk others that are pink. |
“May our bodies, our minds, our spirts, learn a new rhythm paced
by the rhythmic pulse of the whole created order.
May spring come to us, be in us, and recreate life in us.
CHINOOK PSALTER
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