thanks joyce ...

i always have enjoyed your spiels on gardening/plants/flowers.

those tendrils are the most amazing things ...

i have wild grape vine and many other types of climbing
things and i am constantly "steering" them by trying to
get a tendril to grab on here and there. 
and the reaction time is very short ...
lay one side of a tendril against something and within
minutes you can see it begin to bend and find purchase.

i also like to plant gourds ... birdnest gourds for sure ...
and they are very fast to "reach out". and i try to connect
them to the wild grapes that hang down from the trees and
end up with a wall of gourds as they climb over each other.

also have some unknown "weed" thing that is the fastest climber
i have yet seen ... it will send up two large tendriles ...
which wrap around one another to make a freestanding stalk
that can reach 3 foot ... in search of low tree branches.
i've actually measured the progress and it is as much as
18 inches a day!!! whatever these are ... they eventually
produce some very sweet smelling flowers so i encourage them
as long as they aren't attempting to take over my garden.

speaking of scents ...
my all time favorite flower scent is that of the lowly milkweed.
every time i get down close and inhale i am amazed at that
smell ... it is so wonderful my poor brain cannot come close
to retaining the experience and i am surprised every time i
bow my head down to intake it. i have some about to open in
a week or so. i can hardly wait!!!

-ts-


--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Know Mystery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> 
> Hi All Friends -
> 
> :)
> 
> Last month, I planted Sweet Peas from seeds - unusual seeds that 
looked like so many small tan seed pearls. The green rectangular 
planter and the large round urn in my balcony garden are now overrun 
with plucky Sweet Pea sproutlings, some six to eight inches tall 
already. 
> 
> The garden usually needs to be watered only every couple of days 
this time of year. Lately, we've had rain showers almost every day, 
so I've missed a couple of days tending to the plants and flowers and 
vegetables. 
> 
> A lot can happen in a garden over the course of a few days of 
inattention. Mystery flowers are blooming with tiny white fragrant 
blossoms and now have green disc-like seed pods developing. Green 
clover has taken a stand in the pot with the geraniums. The lilies 
look the same as they have every June - each year there is the worry 
that they will falter, and each year they prove me wrong. The maple 
tree that sprouted from the whirly bird is very small and vulnerable-
looking; hard to imagine that a tree that grows so large can start so 
precariously. 
> 
> And the Sweet Peas? Some looked windblown from our torrential storm 
last week, leaning in odd directions, and as I set about 
straightening them up, I noticed small tendrils that weren't there 
last week. Tiny, curling, delicate tendrils, nearly as wispy as the 
filaments of a spider's web, reached out towards anything nearby. In 
some cases, what they reached for and found was another Sweet Pea 
plant. Some were intertwined by their tendrils; wrapped around each 
other in a Sweet Pea embrace, they held onto each other for support. 
They were adorable.
> 
> I gently unwrapped the conjoined plants, tenderly unfurling the 
green threadlike tendrils. Then I set up a lattice work of strings 
for the plants to climb. I placed the first Sweet Pea plant into 
position and pushed the tendril next to the string; the tendril was 
long and very straight and so wispy - about one quarter the width of 
a toothpick. I worked my way down the row of Sweet Peas in the green 
planter - nine of them in all - positioning each plant as best I 
could next to a string. 
> 
> When I had finished with the last plant, I stood up and stretched 
and shook out my knees in relief, then gathered up the spool of 
string and scissors. Before going back indoors, I took one last look 
at the first plant positioned next to it's string to make sure things 
were still lined up. 
> 
> Remember that tendril that was long and very straight and so wispy? 
It was still long and wispy, but no longer very straight, not at all. 
It was curled around the string, not with one loop but two. In less 
than fifteen minutes, the smart Sweet Pea had grasped onto the string 
and sinuously curled a tendril around it, instinctively finding the 
support it needed to climb towards the sun and bloom. 
> 
> Seeing that Sweet Pea grab onto the string reinforced for me 
something I realized one winter day a couple of years ago, as I 
watched white Narcissus flowers follow the sun's rays across a 
window. Back then, the Narcissus blossoms physically moved more than 
18 inches over the course of the day, a silent and fragrant metronome 
swaying to the beat of the sun. Today, the Sweet Pea sought out the 
string and grabbed on for survival. 
> 
> To those who deny that plants can be sentient, I would say this: 
don't take my word for it. Next winter, plant some Narcissus bulbs 
indoors and watch them sway to the sun. Next spring, plant some Sweet 
Peas or Moonflowers or anything with tendrils that reach and embrace. 
There is nothing to lose and so many beautiful blossoms to gain.
> 
> love and peace,
> 
> joyce
> 
> 
>               
> ---------------------------------
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