My Parents, The Gardeners

in HiveGarden4 days ago

This is a photo of my parents in their acre-large garden in the '80s. Dad had a nice moustache that carried through to the early '90's. They are sitting in Mum's herb garden where she grew all the herbs she could find. Lavender, peppermint, sage, thyme, borage - you name it. She had a heap of herb books that she would pour over and send us looking for plants when she wanted to make a fresh herbal tea. I remember her sending us into the garden with the promise of a dollar if we found a plantain (the leaf variety - we were in temperate southern Australia). They had a vegetable garden where Dad enthused about fresh peas and some chooks. When I moved out of home, I took herbs with me. Mum had given me the bug.

Side note - they're sitting at the start of a brick path my father made. He finished it with what he said was a dragon's tail, but when we all stepped back to admire it, someone said it looked like a penis, and none of us could unsee it. Later they had an arbor. Mum loved her climbing roses.

This photo is my parents in the weeks before Dad died, just over a year ago. He'd struggle out into their beautiful garden to chat to us before hobbling back in to go to pained sleep. They both hate this photo. They said they look old. IN the background, a huge pile of mulch that needs moving. This garden is extraordinary, even though the oxalis is taking over. It's full of beautiful trees and native plants. Poor Mum is struggling to stay on top of it. WE all gardened like mad when Dad died, channelling our grief into productivity.

Side note, he was buried in that blue shirt.

Dad was always roping us into garden projects or helping with ours. Gazebos and compost bays, pizza ovens under cover, bamboo forests. He loved bamboo. We used to joke he was a panda in a past life.

Dad would have been an architect if he was to retrain (he was a draftsman) and loved design. It shows in the organised beauty of the garden, and various features like bird baths and posts on jaunty angles. We'd go visit botanical gardens and he'd always want to bring an idea home, though Mum would be furious at things she didn't like, like cactus and hard to maintain grasses. There's a cabbage tree in the garden she's finally chopped down in a kind of defiance. He can't veto that now.

In the last few years when he was sick, he gave up on gardening projects. He couldn't be bothered. Mum wanted a gardening shed, the vegetable garden to be fenced, various other things but it was too much for Dad. Those things would carry on after he was gone. Next week I'm helping her put in some more raised beds, though I worry it's all too much for her. The garden is looking worse for wear. She needs to get some help in but is procrastinating. She misses him.

Dad painted these totem poles in the garden - totally cultural appropriation on aggy pipe. He loved the story that a kangaroo came past whilst he was painting them.

When he was in hospital once we all did a working bee and made a gorgeous garden outside of their bedroom with my uncle, nephews and husband. He had to let go of pride and was chuffed that we did it.

It's hard to say why they loved gardening so much. Maybe because Dad's Mum was a green thumb, brought up on a farm in Germany. Maybe it was because they loved nature and beautiful things. Maybe it was because it helped calm Dad down when he was stressed. Maybe it just became a habit. Maybe he just liked things neat and tidy and organised. Maybe they respected the environment. Maybe all those things.

Every time I rake I think of Dad. It's the last garden thing he could do, gently raking the gum leaves that would cough up off the trees in a wind. You'd be in the car chatting to them about to leave and he'd have the rake in his hand.

Undoubtedly, they gave me a love of gardening myself. Me and Mum still send each other reels of inpsiring garden content. I go round there and help her weed now and then, and probably will more when my house is done. And when we bougt the new place, my 76 year old mother came round with a reciprocating saw and helped me tidy up.

Ghost Dad's around too, with the rake.

This post was written to the theme of 'parent garden' in the Hive Garden community this week. Anyone can write - head over and check out the challenge if you need some writing inspiration!

With Love,

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Ghost Dad, Ghost Bird.

“Where lies the strangling fruit that came from the hand of the sinner I shall bring forth the seeds of the dead to share with the worms that gather in the darkness and surround the world with the power of their lives while from the dimlit halls of other places forms that never were and never could be writhe for the impatience of the few who never saw what could have been."

I know we're not really all that far away from the end of the year, but your influence on me, and getting to know you better throughout these last few months has been one of the happiest times of my existence.

Mainly because I get to read beautiful things like the quote above (for those wondering, its from Jeff Van Der Meer's Annihilation book - but it is such a fitting quote to include here in this real, human story about generations and their gardens.

Plants have generations, too, I suppose some are much longer than our own, some much shorter, but without them, we wouldn't be here, and boy am I glad that we're all here to enjoy them, even if the vast majority do not respect them.

If your mum can't wield a rake anymore, get her a little battery powered leaf blower and some ear muffs. They're obnoxious tools, but I have come to love mine since I have come to love the whipper snipper, too. Cut cut cut, then blow the bits that were cut back onto the grass as food for the next gen of grass that I'll cut when it grows back.

 4 days ago  

Humbled. 🥰🥰🥰

When Dad died, Mum went and bought the power tools she'd been wanting for ages. A reciprocating saw. A leaf blower. She wields a tool like a boss.

Still, these constant winds don't help.An acre of leaves. Then the pool. Oh goodness I really must find time to help this week.


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Curated by incublus

That's an amazing story of your parents' garden. It's really hard to try to garden by yourself. I'm glad you all can give her some help and support. An acre is huge, mine is only 67% of an acre.

 4 days ago  

Seriously???? I thought your place was huge!!!!!

She won't ask for help but I'm trying x

Yup, only 67% is the garden. The farm is 8.67 acres.

 4 days ago  

Ah, see, I knew something wasn't right ...

This is such a heartwarming read. Your dad's memory still lives on and I know it's one thing that will make you love gardening more. How he tend to all the plants in his garden. Thanks for sharing your experience with us.

 4 days ago  

💕💕💕

Undoubtedly, they gave me a love of gardening myself.

Undoubtedly...what a lovely post showing some unforgettable memories...My mom is also 76 and she still does a lot. It's good to see them active and busy.

 4 days ago  

I'm glad your Mum is still active. How's your Dad doing?

How's your Dad doing?

Doing better now.

 3 days ago  

Good to hear.

Your parents’ garden feels like more than just a place, it’s a living memory of love, hard work and family connection. I can imagine how much joy and comfort it brought during your dad’s last days.

 4 days ago  

The view from Dad's bedroom was lovely. Lots of flowering natives and birds he enjoyed watching from bed. Breaks my heart thinking so clearly of that now.