It is deep January. The sky is hard.
The stalks are firmly rooted in ice.
Wallace Stevens
No Possum, No Sop, No Taters
Saw these sunflowers today as I drove the country roads. They've motivated me to get back into blogging.
I've missed seeing your gardens.
Hi Donna! I'm glad to see you posted. I didn't realize those were sunflowers until I read what you said. Those words about deep January sound like someone longing for spring, as I am. My red/pink hellebore buds froze, but I am assuming they will bloom again when the weather permits.
ReplyDeleteWe'll both enjoy spring as it unfolds in other areas, until it's our turn.
Sue, thanks for being so speedy with leaving a comment. More motivation for me to keep blogging. So glad I 'met' you through blogging.
DeleteThey look so sad. Like the rest of us Northerns, we miss the warm sun.
ReplyDeleteSo nice to see you post again. I've missed you.
Lindalou....hello. Coming over to visit your blog right now.
ReplyDeleteHello hello my dear friend. It was just yesterday that I was thinking about you. I went to clean up my blog a bit and came across yours....didn't know if I should delete it or not. Decided not to.....and now I'm soooo glad I didn't. Cause here you are back again.
ReplyDeleteHope things are just fine with you and the family. Good to have you back Donna. And my your garden bloom again soon.
Ours is covered in snow right now.
Wonderful hugs my faraway friend.
Dagmar
Hi Donna! That is a very cool photo! I love it! Have missed you, and look forward to future posts!!! Happy January!
ReplyDeletexoxo- Julie
And we've missed you! I'm taking a little blogging break myself while I'm working full-time for a short while, but I do pop in to see what's going on when I can. When I saw you had posted, I had to stop by and say hello. The photo and quote are so appropriate--we have had very little snow, but the ground is certainly frozen. I put a few sprigs of artificial holly and greens in an outdoor pot on a warm day before Christmas--now they're frozen in the soil, and I can't get them out! Wonder if they will look like anything by the time a spring thaw rolls around:) Looking forward to spring already!
ReplyDeleteNostalgic photo! I imagine everyone in your part of the world is missing gardens right about now! Spring will come again (and then I'll envy you!).
ReplyDelete(Lots of retirees from your part of the country here in our RV Park!)
Welcome back! Missed you. Stay warm and dream of spring.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! Donna, I go through phases of blogging, mostly not having the time to write or visit others. But I don't plan to stop and I hope you don't either!
ReplyDeleteAnd we missed your Donna. Good to see you back. The ground is frozen really hard here as well. And sub zero this morning. Brrrrr....
ReplyDeleteHi, Donna,
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by the Marmelade Gypsy! It's nice to "meet" you! Your profile says Wisconsin -- I'm surprised there isn't more snow, but it certainly is as cold there as it is in Michigan! This is a lovely image. It speaks to the bleakness of winter!
You've been missed too!
ReplyDeleteDonna....how great to see you back!! Have missed you here in blogland, but I do get the need to take breaks once in a while.
ReplyDeleteSo glad I met you on Facebook, Donna. And now I will follow your blog. They Sunflower photo is sweet!
ReplyDeleteOh, so very happy to see a post from you!! It is officially seed catalog time, which is what pulls me through January and February.
ReplyDeleteOops I missed something. The "bluebird picture" is a mountain bluebird certainly not found in Minnesota either. I took it in the Black Hills (Custer State Park) on our way to camping in Montana.
ReplyDeleteYeah, you're back!
ReplyDeleteGlad you are back, Donna! Well, I am back from our holiday from the Phils. It was great being with family even it was just only for 3 weeks.
ReplyDeleteI forgot that you had asked me about picking Japanese beetles off my roses without them flying away. The trick is to do it early in the morning or late in the evening when they are groggy. Also, I don't actually pick them off, I knock them into the waiting cup of soapy water. They naturally drop to the ground, so hold the cup under them. Of course, a few will escape, but most will stupidly drop to their death, while we chuckle with glee. LOL
ReplyDelete