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Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Monday, May 25, 2026
Monday, May 4, 2026
Monday, June 30, 2025
It's Fine, Just Fine
By an old guy's standards,
a hot day on the Pacific Coast.
Heat cooks the sky
to an ashen blue.
I work in the garden some.
Gardeners volunteer
join the Sisyphus
crew. They toil through
myriad cycles that roll
around to starts. Water,
soil, sun, seed, sprout,
plant, blossom, veg, fruit.
Dig and pull and lift and tend.
It all collapses like a circus
tent. Winter eats leftovers,
belches frost. In Spring,
it's Finnegan Begin-Again.
Heavy mud, dead stalks.
In the now, I fall back
into a chair, guzzle water,
dash some on my face
and neck. A crow lands
on a wire and keeps its
beak open to let heat
out of its body. The bird
and I just happen to be
now here in this tiny wedge
of nature. We finish
tasks as assigned,
and it's fine, just fine.
You and me, bird, you
and me and that
minor, muscled god
whose name hisses.
hans ostrom 2025
Monday, April 29, 2024
Zen Weeding
At last I attacked
a rude section of weeds
in the veg garden. I dug,
pulled, yanked, ripped,
shook, and tossed plants
with white ganglia roots.
I sweat, took off my jacket,
got chilled, put it back on.
A rain squall came. I told
myself to stay in the weeding
moment. Zen weeder. I couldn't.
My mind hopped around
like water drops on a hot
griddle. But trying to stay
in the moment kept me
weeding, at least. Half-
zenned, half the weeds gone,
drenched, I scurried inside.
hans ostrom 2024
Sunday, July 30, 2023
Squashes in the Farmers' Market
Market squashes (do the Brits
call them "marrow"?) conjure a carnivalof painted shapes self-sculpted
by the genius of seeds. Like books,
the squashes have pulp inside,
enclosed by hard or soft covers.
Some species hold a hollow
zone where sound can play.
Dried gourds become instruments,
and a thumped pumpkin will mumble
autumn syllables. A crook-necked
squash can become the baton
that conducts Zucchini's unfinished
symphony. Still, Fall does mean
the party's over. We select our squash,
haul it home to grill or bake--or cut up
raw. Next Summer's vines are already
blue-printed in seeds as the soil rolls
over, exhausted, in need of dreams.
hans ostrom 2023
Saturday, May 27, 2023
Of Roses, Again
Just as castles want
nothing to dowith other buildings--
roses don't desire
the company of other flowers.
They wield thorny branches
like maces, defending
their center. Buds
and opened roses
emerge like wise,
gorgeous princesses.
And the colors. My
God--as vivid
and stirring as flags,
as various as whims.
A gardener cultivates
flowers. A gardener
negotiates with roses,
which define their property,
own it, become green
monuments with spikes.
hans ostrom 2023
Thursday, April 27, 2023
I Spy the Local Eagle
I'm hauling a bin of prunings
and clippings when a bald eagleflies by low. With one quick
side-glance, it unnerves me.
Such a sure bird, dark and big-
shouldered, yellow-clawed
like a dragon, its wide wings
like a glider's. Those white
head-feathers surround cold
binocular eyes, microscopic
if need be, as when the eagle
parks above water, wings wide,
not moving, not straining, absolute
mastery of air-currents. And
the bird with the wrecking
beak looks down. Sees
the necessary fish. Dives.
Bound to land, I pull
the bin like a large draught horse,
heavy-footed, and a breeze
teases my cap.
hans ostrom 2023
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
seagull in time
seagull high
up on a pole
sees dawn come
early enough
today to face
fully, light
dyeing white
feathers pink.
to me, it's still
astounding how
this whirling
sphere (which we
don't own)
sidles so slowly
up to its local
fireball this
time of year,
this time of
time. I itch
to dig in muddy
soil, the tip
of my old
shovel worn
into a concave
crescent line.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
From a Diary of the Plague Year (13)
Sometimes I'm inside
hiding from the virus.
Sometimes I'm outside
hiding from the virus,
digging in the dirt around
fledgling vegetables
and forming flowers.
Inside or outside,
I also try to hide from
celebrities. Their faces,
peccadilloes, opinions,
and posts swarm. They're
not the norm but the fame
machine tries to make us
famished, hungry for
manufactured news
of celebs. It makes me
febrile, celebraphobic,
vised in by the virus
and the famous. I don't
know who most of them
are but must react as if I do.
Inside, old time reading
helps, hefting a book of words.
Outside, the worms and crows
and trees and fleas are not
famous and I am treated
as just another beast.
hans ostrom 2020
hiding from the virus.
Sometimes I'm outside
hiding from the virus,
digging in the dirt around
fledgling vegetables
and forming flowers.
Inside or outside,
I also try to hide from
celebrities. Their faces,
peccadilloes, opinions,
and posts swarm. They're
not the norm but the fame
machine tries to make us
famished, hungry for
manufactured news
of celebs. It makes me
febrile, celebraphobic,
vised in by the virus
and the famous. I don't
know who most of them
are but must react as if I do.
Inside, old time reading
helps, hefting a book of words.
Outside, the worms and crows
and trees and fleas are not
famous and I am treated
as just another beast.
hans ostrom 2020
Monday, March 16, 2020
From a Diary of the Plague Year (3)
Planting yarrow on a hillside--
glimpsed a lone eagle just overhead.
It locked its wings to an updraft,
parked, scanned. I saw its
head tilt toward me. And the eyes.
I won't say I felt hunted. I will
say I stood up and tried to convey
maximum respect. The bright
white of the bird's head flashed
like snow on the Olympic Range,
also visible today--its sharp
peaks bunched together like a
stone chorus. The eagle
coasted in circles--stiff wind
not more than an obedient
servant. Rotating its body
and wings, it was off to complete
rounds, diagnosing the ground.
Predatory, pristine, supreme,
remote, austere: eagle,
above our clotted fretting
down here.
hans ostrom 2020
glimpsed a lone eagle just overhead.
It locked its wings to an updraft,
parked, scanned. I saw its
head tilt toward me. And the eyes.
I won't say I felt hunted. I will
say I stood up and tried to convey
maximum respect. The bright
white of the bird's head flashed
like snow on the Olympic Range,
also visible today--its sharp
peaks bunched together like a
stone chorus. The eagle
coasted in circles--stiff wind
not more than an obedient
servant. Rotating its body
and wings, it was off to complete
rounds, diagnosing the ground.
Predatory, pristine, supreme,
remote, austere: eagle,
above our clotted fretting
down here.
hans ostrom 2020
Friday, March 13, 2020
Regarding Planted Trees
The trees I've planted in several
locales on this West Coast
have their own lives. They
must manage sap, paint leaves,
then cast them off, then more
leaves, blossoms, plums, apples . . .
Birds and insects consider
these trees to be airports
and resorts for summer avian
tourists. From a window
I can see the sensualist fig
tree spread its branches
voluptuously. It produces
shamelessly extravagant leaves.
Months from now it will let
figs swell, harden, soften
lasciviously. Thank God
I planted that tree, I murmur
sometimes to myself, quietly.
hans ostrom 2020
locales on this West Coast
have their own lives. They
must manage sap, paint leaves,
then cast them off, then more
leaves, blossoms, plums, apples . . .
Birds and insects consider
these trees to be airports
and resorts for summer avian
tourists. From a window
I can see the sensualist fig
tree spread its branches
voluptuously. It produces
shamelessly extravagant leaves.
Months from now it will let
figs swell, harden, soften
lasciviously. Thank God
I planted that tree, I murmur
sometimes to myself, quietly.
hans ostrom 2020
Sunday, July 14, 2019
Ultimate Shade
A gardener grabbed
dead day-lily stalks
and some soil with them.
And an earthworm. Earthworm.
Syllables of that word
burrow deep in the mouth. Said
gardener let the worm lie
in a gloved palm. Said
earthworm paused its wriggling
until the gloved hand had
repatriated it to a bed of soil
where vegetables meet
to gossip about each other.
Buried alive in soft dirt,
the worm resurrected its writhing
life in ultimate shade, as gardener
returned to a life in air and light
and work and worry.
hans ostrom 2019
dead day-lily stalks
and some soil with them.
And an earthworm. Earthworm.
Syllables of that word
burrow deep in the mouth. Said
gardener let the worm lie
in a gloved palm. Said
earthworm paused its wriggling
until the gloved hand had
repatriated it to a bed of soil
where vegetables meet
to gossip about each other.
Buried alive in soft dirt,
the worm resurrected its writhing
life in ultimate shade, as gardener
returned to a life in air and light
and work and worry.
hans ostrom 2019
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
October Figs
Finally they've changed
from hard green knobs to small
soft purple pouches, veined.
Inside they're vegetative
geodes. As filtered through
O'Keefe and Lawrence, they
may amuse you with vaginal
likeness. That's fun, but anyway:
harvest. Their deep brown stems
are so soft now, the figs
fall into your palm almost
before the pick. The taste
is outside sweet or savory.
It's creamy, calmly robust.
If you must, think of lust.
hans ostrom 2018
from hard green knobs to small
soft purple pouches, veined.
Inside they're vegetative
geodes. As filtered through
O'Keefe and Lawrence, they
may amuse you with vaginal
likeness. That's fun, but anyway:
harvest. Their deep brown stems
are so soft now, the figs
fall into your palm almost
before the pick. The taste
is outside sweet or savory.
It's creamy, calmly robust.
If you must, think of lust.
hans ostrom 2018
Monday, April 30, 2018
Cold April
unfriendly sky
new garden leaves shiver
the crows flap hard against the wind
hans ostrom 2018
new garden leaves shiver
the crows flap hard against the wind
hans ostrom 2018
Monday, September 18, 2017
A Quality of Cold in September
Cold no longer subtle,
as the shifts started in September
as we finished framing a house.
Hurry, get the roof on.
Cold now in September
as I clear the garden beds,
knocking loose a few last
golden potatoes and carrots
with sunburned indigo shoulders.
It's an insistent chill. An overture
to a Winter suite. An advance-team
working for an immanent season
that bides its clime in gravitational
patterns. A shirt under
a flannel work-shirt--then and now--
soaks up sweat & cold startles
the skin when wind rouses itself.
This is a ritual annoyance
that flavors wistful weariness
when I pick up a rake or a shovel.
hans ostrom 2017
as the shifts started in September
as we finished framing a house.
Hurry, get the roof on.
Cold now in September
as I clear the garden beds,
knocking loose a few last
golden potatoes and carrots
with sunburned indigo shoulders.
It's an insistent chill. An overture
to a Winter suite. An advance-team
working for an immanent season
that bides its clime in gravitational
patterns. A shirt under
a flannel work-shirt--then and now--
soaks up sweat & cold startles
the skin when wind rouses itself.
This is a ritual annoyance
that flavors wistful weariness
when I pick up a rake or a shovel.
hans ostrom 2017
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Sunflowers Are Sad, Experts Claim
Propaganda notwithstanding, sunflowers
are morose. Their puritanical, resolute
stalks lift them up to be sacrificed
to the gods, which employ birds, flies,
and bees as visiting priests. The central
cycloptic seed-cushion--color of tobacco
juice--weighs too much, like depression.
Too, please note the celebrated solar petals
wrinkle like Edwardian handkerchiefs
left in a jungle. Oh, Sunflower, foster
child of Old Bill Blake, 1960s advertising,
and baseball players: I bow my head
to you and yours. You grow, I garden,
and it's all work, isn't it?
hans ostrom 2017
are morose. Their puritanical, resolute
stalks lift them up to be sacrificed
to the gods, which employ birds, flies,
and bees as visiting priests. The central
cycloptic seed-cushion--color of tobacco
juice--weighs too much, like depression.
Too, please note the celebrated solar petals
wrinkle like Edwardian handkerchiefs
left in a jungle. Oh, Sunflower, foster
child of Old Bill Blake, 1960s advertising,
and baseball players: I bow my head
to you and yours. You grow, I garden,
and it's all work, isn't it?
hans ostrom 2017
Friday, August 26, 2016
Always One More
There's always one more, you know. One
more problem, pain, opportunity, pleasure.
Another nail, bolt, squirt of toothpaste, surprise.
And another acceptance required.
One more blackberry or tomato to pick,
one more spud in the dirt. Another task,
chore, duty. Oh, yes, one more good
idea, atavistic evil notion, phase
of healthy cultural growth. Another
star, pickle, song. One more
word, glance of understanding, heart break.
Until there isn't. But then there is.
hans ostrom 2016
more problem, pain, opportunity, pleasure.
Another nail, bolt, squirt of toothpaste, surprise.
And another acceptance required.
One more blackberry or tomato to pick,
one more spud in the dirt. Another task,
chore, duty. Oh, yes, one more good
idea, atavistic evil notion, phase
of healthy cultural growth. Another
star, pickle, song. One more
word, glance of understanding, heart break.
Until there isn't. But then there is.
hans ostrom 2016
Friday, May 13, 2016
Faith Is Bulbs
Faith? Don't speak to me of Allah, Yahweh,
Jahova, Christ, Moses, da Buddha-man, Zeus,
Sky Papa, Earth Mama--or any of it.
I'm no atheist. I'm a modest gardener,
vegetables and flowers, who in Spring
is online-ordering tulip bulbs to plant
in October and to witness the following
Spring. That is faith.
hans ostrom 2016
Jahova, Christ, Moses, da Buddha-man, Zeus,
Sky Papa, Earth Mama--or any of it.
I'm no atheist. I'm a modest gardener,
vegetables and flowers, who in Spring
is online-ordering tulip bulbs to plant
in October and to witness the following
Spring. That is faith.
hans ostrom 2016
Thursday, January 7, 2016
Under the Horizon
Thinking today of how like all workers
the Old Man got body-tired of and bored
with labor about the same time, like me
today chopping at a vegetable garden's
frozen mud in January. Your mind
lets your body make your mind
think, "This shit is getting old."
You feel like you think the sun
looks when it seems to drop
below the top of shadowed hills:
ready for bed. Of course there's more
work waiting under the horizon.
hans ostrom 2016
the Old Man got body-tired of and bored
with labor about the same time, like me
today chopping at a vegetable garden's
frozen mud in January. Your mind
lets your body make your mind
think, "This shit is getting old."
You feel like you think the sun
looks when it seems to drop
below the top of shadowed hills:
ready for bed. Of course there's more
work waiting under the horizon.
hans ostrom 2016
Friday, March 13, 2015
"Plenty of Enough"
He preferred disenchanted gardens,
their real dishabile.
Accepted how, without wizardry,
one seed became a huge plant
with edible stuff hanging from it:
that was plenty of enough.
If a unicorn or a nymph
should wander in
among the productive mess,
he'd offer the nymph
a sugar-pea pod
and wait for the unicorn
to generate manure.
Fertilizer, of course.
He liked to listen to bumble-bees
and watch the writhing dance of worms.
hans ostrom 2015
their real dishabile.
Accepted how, without wizardry,
one seed became a huge plant
with edible stuff hanging from it:
that was plenty of enough.
If a unicorn or a nymph
should wander in
among the productive mess,
he'd offer the nymph
a sugar-pea pod
and wait for the unicorn
to generate manure.
Fertilizer, of course.
He liked to listen to bumble-bees
and watch the writhing dance of worms.
hans ostrom 2015
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