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It’s Almost Spring, and I’m Not Ready

3/8/2024

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The calendar says it’s still winter. However, the occasional 70-degree temps say otherwise. Granted, the warmth is widely interspersed between the usual overnight dips into 30s and daytime highs in the 50s. Soon, though, the thermometers will creep up the scale and stay in the toasty zone. I can’t wait!

All four seasons have their advantages, and I like them all, but spring must be my favorite. It’s a magical time of year. My little part of the world transforms from a gray, monotonous landscape to a gorgeous rainbow of colors, seemingly overnight.

Right now, the Carolina Jessamine vines are peaking out of ditches and thickets, showing off their bright yellow flowers. They’re usually the first native plants to bloom. I think of them as nature’s way of informing us that spring will soon be here.

I enjoy keeping track of the bare twigs and the leafless bushes as they begin to sport new life. By paying attention to minute changes, it’s not such a surprise when roadsides become speckled with varying shades of blue, white, pink, and green. I love to watch the bees, butterflies, moths, wasps, and other creatures as they leave their winter homes to explore the blossoming treasures.
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Yep, spring is just around the corner.  

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Wait, Wait, I’m not Ready Yet!
It’s already March, and I haven’t even started winter sowing. Now that we’re in our new home, I’ll try to get some annuals started. Last weekend, Silke and I loaded up a U-Haul trailer and transported all my worldly goods to our new home. So, after we get everything inside the house sorted, I’ll be able to concentrate on outside stuff.

Unfortunately, the pre-planted garden beds are filled with non-native bushes such as Japanese privet, Chinese holly, and the invasive Heavenly bamboo (Nandina). They’re going to go.
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The few Yaupon holly bushes will remain, even though they’re a dwarf cultivar. I’ll fill in around them with mixed wildflower seeds from the SC Native Plant Society.

​That will be our first task – not too difficult, even though we’ll have to clear away about six inches of wood mulch to get to the soil.

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Next, we’ll tackle the bare ground. To begin with, I want to plant some flowers and veggies along the chainlink fence and then work out from there. One good thing is that there’s no need to smother grass with cardboard or many weeds to pull up. That’ll make life a little easier for our first planting season - the first of many to come.
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Converting our yard into an insect/bird/wildlife paradise will take a long time, as in years. It’s overwhelming to contemplate all the work ahead of us. I know we don’t have to do everything all at once, but time is a factor.

I wonder if I’ll live long enough to see my dream come true. Hope so. At any rate, I’ll plug away at it as best I can.

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    Greta Burroughs

    Through the Lens of a Nature-Lover

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    No creature, whether it has two, four, six, eight, or no legs, should ever be homeless. Every living being deserves the basics of food, water, and shelter. By planting native plants, trees, and shrubs, I can do something toward providing the food and shelter these creatures need.

    ​It's amazing how plants and insects evolved to interact with each other, and how one could always instinctively rely upon the other for survival.

    That's what Mother Nature intended.

    Unfortunately, humanity's carelessness and greed disrupted her master plan.


    ​I'm on a quest to help restore Nature's balance by collecting seeds from, transplanting, or propagating the indigenous plants I find along the roadsides and fields before they are mown down or poisoned with pesticides.

    Then, if my gardening skills don't fail me, my yard will eventually provide a year-round oasis of native flowers, trees, and shrubs that'll provide the food and shelter insects need to thrive and never be homeless again. 

    Through the Lens of a Nature-Lover will share my journey as I discover, photograph, and rescue the plants and bugs no one else notices.

    Please join me in my quest to end homelessness. Thank you for caring.


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I will read forever because it lets me visit in my mind the worlds that I will never be able to see; it helps me put away the stresses of the day and relax into the rhythm of the story before me; it lets me bring to the surface and experience without regrets those feelings I hide away; it lets me re-experience the thrill of first love through someone else's eyes; it keeps my mind juiced so that it will never desert me; it is always there for me even when there's no one else. I will read forever no matter whether it is print or digital because the words will always call to me. ~ A Sassy Scribbler