This holiday and the fact John is
under the apple tree with all the pets has made me wonder about my decision to
sell the house. I’d intended to do that this summer until the pandemic changed
my plans. Now, I’m wondering if that’s such a good decision. There are so many
memories I’d be leaving behind and not just memories of John.
Looking out the window, I can see John’s
grandmother’s grape vine which has gone absolutely crazy in the last few years.
It looks as though it plans to take over the entire greenbelt behind the fence.
It’s only the last few years that the grapes have gotten big enough to actually
enjoy. Haley picked buckets full a couple of years ago and I made grape jelly…won’t
be doing that again. Still, I always think of Grandma Ebba and our times with
her when I see the grapevine.
There’s my Great Aunt Lola’s fuchsia.
She’s been gone for a very long time, but her fuchsia grows and blooms every
single year. She also gave me a pampas grass start, but I managed to kill it in
the process of finding just the right spot in the garden. I moved it once too
often. Auntie Lola’s also the woman who taught me to make pickles and can
beans. My reminders of her would continue when it came to making pickles, but I’d
miss the fuchsia.
The tulip tree is past is blooming
prime now, but it was a gift in honor of my mother after she passed away. I
love the way it’s branches form and make it look like a giant candelabra when
it blossoms in the spring. There’s also the pink dogwood, John’s sister gifted after
my mom died…that’s in the front yard. And, yes, I’d still think of my mom
without those living reminders, but I’d miss their beautiful glory in the
spring.
I cannot forget the apple tree. John
and a neighbor saved it decades ago. It was so loaded with baby apples and grew
leaning toward the west, that it fell over. I opened the garage door to hang
laundry on my clothesline only to be faced with a wall of green. I called John
at work and he told me to cover the roots. I did, and that evening he and a
neighbor used a chain fall and a tree behind the fence to hoist it back into
place. He shimmed it up with three four-by-fours until it was strong enough to
stand on its own. We had dozens of apple pies and jars of applesauce from that
tree. True, it hasn’t produced much in the recent past, but I can always hope.
The lilacs in both the back yard and
front came from either John’s mother or his sister or maybe both. They are my
favorite smelly shrub and I love to bring a bouquet into the house when they
bloom. There wasn’t much on the ones in back this year because they were pretty heavily pruned last fall. Next spring, they should be glorious.
If I moved someplace else, I couldn’t
replace the little water feature I built in the garden. I knew exactly what I
wanted and John told me it would never work. I dug the hole, lined it with
plastic, covered that with rocks and positioned the huge concrete birdbath John
had given me at the edge. Being the good sport he was, he went ahead and made
the piping I needed to get the water from the little pond up to the birdbath. When
I placed it, I’d fixed it so it was tipping toward the water, the idea being
the water could cascade over the edge and into the pond, making a nice water
noise.
Well, John was right, it didn’t work,
but not for the reasons he gave. The water went up the pipe and into the
birdbath, but instead of cascading into the pond, it simply ran over the edge and
continued to flow down the outside of the birdbath and onto the supporting
column…no water noise at all. To make it work, the birdbath would have had to
be at such an angle, it would have fallen over. John was right about that part.
He did help me figure out what I needed to do in the way of a small pump that
sends water arcing from the edge to the center and provides the soothing noise
I wanted.
In the front yard, there are two
trees. One is a spruce that was the live Christmas tree of the folks who lived
in the house before us. It wasn’t that big when we moved in, but now it towers
over the neighborhood. One winter, it snowed a lot and the power went down. That
tree was strung with big Christmas lights. John ran a cord from the generator
to the tree. We had neighbors calling to find out why we had power and they
didn’t…very funny.
Spruce & pink dogwood |
The other tree is a red oak. It was
given to me decades ago by someone who hasn’t been a friend in decades as well…and
not because of the tree. Anyway, it had lived in a five-gallon bucket forever.
I took it out and planted it in the corner with no idea of how big it would
really become. For several years it did nothing, just sat there and John wanted
to pull it out. I made him leave it and now, I have this HUGE red maple that I’m
a little sorry I ever planted. The one year I did all the leaf control myself,
I had like three yard-waste bins and seven of those beige yard waste bags full
of leaves…what a CHORE.
Then, there’s the companies that go
out and prune big trees like the red maple for Seattle City Light. I’ve always
tried to be home when they do this so I can sort of supervise and make sure
they don’t absolutely butcher the tree. Sometimes the company folks were
agreeable and helpful and other times…like the last time…not so much. I think
come this fall I’m going to need to have my garden care person prune the side
the last company didn’t touch…it’s very lopsided. I don’t think I’d miss the
red maple at all, and probably not the spruce either were I to leave. Who knows, maybe whoever came to live here
would eliminate both of them.
Of course, the most important thing I'd be leaving is John. He's beneath that apple tree where I can sit and talk to him. I do have the glass ball AJ had made from some of his ashes, so unlike all the trees and shrubs, I would take him with me wherever I went.
They say…whoever they are…you shouldn’t make any big decisions until at least a year after your spouse dies. Maybe the pandemic is making sure I didn’t rush anything. Maybe the shelter-in-place order is insuring I do take the time to evaluate what I want to do next. I guess, based on what I’ve typed here, I’d be leaving more than just an empty house were I to move.
They say…whoever they are…you shouldn’t make any big decisions until at least a year after your spouse dies. Maybe the pandemic is making sure I didn’t rush anything. Maybe the shelter-in-place order is insuring I do take the time to evaluate what I want to do next. I guess, based on what I’ve typed here, I’d be leaving more than just an empty house were I to move.
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