Tag Archives: garden

Heat

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Nobody keeps record temperatures in Lemon Cove, but yesterday’s 101° in Fresno broke the high set in 1927. It was 104° on Dry Creek as we hauled gooseneck loads of weaned calves, gathered the 101° day before, off the Paregein Ranch—three two-hour, four-wheel drive round trips off the mountain. In addition to the calves, we hauled 20% of the cows down to go to town as we prepare for summer with little feed. With less than 8” of rain, our rainy season is over until October, capping a second year of drought. With no snowpack or surface water runoff in California, hay prices are already escalating.

The first few days of 100° heat are hard on people and livestock physically, but we all get out a little earlier in the morning and finish what we didn’t get done in the evening. The most noticeable impact of the heat is to our temperaments, not near as pretty as this white geranium, happy as long as it gets water.

 

PALO VERDE

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Limbs heavy with yellow
petals bumbling with bees,
empty shade beneath.

 

HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY

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Flower Friday – Echinopsis 3

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With basic implements,
wear a morning burst of pink
for Mother’s Day.

 

 

Echinopsis 2

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Bud and bloom, flower
for a day, then sigh—
a man needs many cacti.

 

 

Echinopsis

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Cactus night bloom braves
the sun, but only one day—
for mothers in May.

 

 

PHOTOGRAPH

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A pair in the shade
take a break—quail
on the rail of the gate—

we stop to inhale
with each prolonged
tick of time, knowing

it won’t last long enough
to photograph—to leave
for the house and good lens

to freeze gray detail
to store somewhere.
Instead, we stare

at a mirror
in our garden
we won’t forget.

SPRING TRAP

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Lovely, even when
blind determination
grows into a spring trap.

 

 

Summer Vegetables

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It’s difficult to find much to get excited about with 110+ degrees, day after day, [Weather Journal 2013-14]but Robbin had harvested some vegetables by the time I got back from changing my water and feeding the steers this morning. Like cattle grazing towards the trees at 7:00 a.m., we’re out early and back to shade up before it gets too hot.