constance: (*dons mantle of spring*)
[personal profile] constance
Hello.

I arrived back home from a gratifying baby-cuddling trip -- I will spare those of you who have no interest in cuddling babies the details, but it was most assuredly gratifying -- to find the entire state hidden under a gigantic dustbowl of a pollen blanket. I have never seen such billowing clouds of pollen just right out in the open air before. I sit under a tree at lunch and read, and I can actually see it in the still air, just floating casually around. My city looks as though it's participating in a city-wide car-washing strike (hooray for the allergen union!). It gets on everything. It collects on my black pants and pools on my floors and scratches at the back of my throat and probably turns my snot green (but of course I wouldn't know about that).

And because it is the twenty-first century, I just take my daily doses of all those little chemicals which allow me to breathe this stuff without expiring, and I breathe without expiring and only sneeze and cough and sleep a little more, and I even make plans to garden on the weekend because I found some super-cheap azaleas and daisies and fashionable or no I have always wanted enormous banks of these flowers in my front garden and my god! I have a house! And unlike my plans to build houses from the ground up and eat nothing but fritos and cream cheese frosting for the rest of my life, and even given my talent for seeing plants to their most violent of all possible deaths, this is an entirely practicable plan, I think. And so if you happen to be driving down a certain street in Middle Georgia on Saturday and see a ponytailed redhead with a shovel looking completely confounded and outclassed by a bunch of one-gallon pots of innocent shrubbery, well, that's me. And. If you should see me, and you have some helpful advice to offer, feel free to offer it. I'm not proud.

Date: 2007-03-30 10:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amelia-eve.livejournal.com
Ooh, yeah, zinnias are so vigorous and colorful. I'd be careful with morning glories, though. They can really take over. I wish I could remember which of my friends once proposed to plant morning glories on one side of her yard and mint on the other and let the two of them duke it out.

Date: 2007-03-30 11:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tofty.livejournal.com
hahahahahaha, your friend should totally do that -- or maybe I will! My lawn is in three terraces, and it might be good to try on one terrace and watch for results without having one or the other get too out of hand. The experiment would be more or less contained, in other words. :-?

Date: 2007-03-31 01:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] laurelwood.livejournal.com
I love the idea of morning glories and mint battling for world supremacy! You'd think by now there'd be something on YouTube featuring lots of time-lapse photography and a bitter struggle for the best spot near where the garden hose drips. :D

I've found that the perennial morning glories are really vicious power-seekers; they, along with that clock vine stuff, are the ones I always see climbing over entire buildings and up power lines. But I'll be darned if I can get the annual Heavenly Blue to get over its delicate flower self and cover even a good-sized fence. Maybe I'm doing something wrong!

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