Posts Tagged compost

Groundlings.

Best not step anywhere —
whatever new life you didn’t crush
just means you’ve crushed another
— so dense our biosphere
in the temperate rain forest of Appalachia.

New flowers push up
from the forest floor


from the composting transmutation
of leaves and branches not dead exactly.

A few (money) plants set at the top edge
spill wider and deeper every year,

compounding, while feeding and sharing sex with butterflies.

Thousands of them are marching now,
the apples of May,

but these were the first.

A predictable perpetual surprise.

 

Tags: , , , , , , ,

A flit of piques peaks peeks.

 

We’d come to the compost heap to harvest a poke of genetically dubious
volunteer squash and melons.

Shot a shaggy shadow self.

img_20161009_143425464

Lifting eyes to the hills,
the compost enjoys a 360° sweep,
when the hay’s cut,

img_20161009_143448076

of all our ring of mountains.

img_20161009_143502727

Everywhere, first signs of the retarded deployment of fall colors.

img_20161009_143520649_top

October 15th used to be middle of the range for peak color
in the middle elevations,

img_20161009_143523579

but in this ever-warming century it’s past Halloween,
sliding towards Thanksgiving.

While, beside the monitor, the last of the color
drains from compost-ready cut flowers,
in splendid decadence.

Tags: , , , , ,

Deadheads.

Four pictures of the same

IMG_20160827_182710799_HDR

heap of discarded flowerheads.

IMG_20160820_130410606_HDR

You have to pull the finished flowers

IMG_20160820_130405927_HDR

so the next generation of buds

IMG_20160820_130350309_HDR

will have nutrients and space enough to bloom.

The jumble of fading stems and petals
like a heap of exhausted partygoers
collapsed after the champaign’s gone
caught by the rising sun.

They’d make a lovely jigsaw puzzle.

 

Tags: , , ,