Spring and Hope Greet the Garden

“She turned to the sunlight
And shook her yellow head,
And whispered to her neighbor:
“Winter is dead.”
~ A.A. Milne, When We Were Very Young

Tulip_DSC_1710

Spring has greeted the garden.

Garden_DSC_1704
Bird_DSC_1622
Garden_DSC_1706

The rains last week produced blossoms on the apple tree, and set the Wisteria, Iris and Tulips to blooming.

Apple-Blossom_DSC_1716
Wisteria_DSC_9044Iris_DSC_9041
Tulips_DSC_1664

Maria has been working on a new stone base and platform for the St. Francis statue that graces the garden. A mysterious message: “finish me” – appeared to urge her on.

Finish_DSC_1739

Between stones and mortar, she planted sunflower seeds in the Iris and annuals bed.

Iris-Bed_DSC_9040
Annuals_DSC_0340

Rows of sunflowers will hopefully frame a colorful center of annuals and grace us long after the Iris have faded away. I focused on replacing the Little John plants that we lost to frost last winter in the entry beds. Ina strictly forbade me to go to the nursery in springtime. She must have known that would only encourage me. A mix of drought tolerant Lavender, Ceanothus, and Artemesia will provide near year-round interest – and their performance is proven through two seasons in the garden.

Entry-Bed_DSC_1695

“Spring drew on…and a greenness grew over those brown beds, which, freshening daily, suggested the thought that Hope traversed them at night, and left each morning brighter traces of her steps.” ~ Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre

Garden_DSC_1707

The ten dogs that arrived nearly two weeks ago are gradually coming out of their shells.

Joshua_DSC_1692

Tails are less tucked and smiles quietly cross their faces.

Reservoir-Dogs_DSC_0333

They are gaining weight and regaining their strength.

Abagail_DSC_1724

We call them “The Reservoir Dogs” and you can read their rescue story by following this link.

Dakota is one of our latest arrivals.

Dakota_DSC_9141

He needed emergency surgery to remove one of his eyes – a choke-related injury. We are hopeful that the other eye has been saved; it appears better each day.

Dakota_DSC_9094

You’ll notice an unusual twist to his paw as well. While he does not let it slow him down, he will be having surgery soon to repair and restore his beautiful gait.

Dakota_DSC_9064

These dogs have endured some long hard days – like the garden has weathered winter. But it is spring again – and hope is everywhere.

Lilac_DSC_1670

From Darkness to Light

“Gardens are made of darkness and light entwined.” ~ F.T. McKinstry

Garden_3_14_DSC_0316

Our Homeward Bound Memorial Garden was gifted with light, bright sunshine on Saturday…

Garden_Dog_3_14

And dark, grey skies on Sunday.

Garden_3_14_DSC_0309

A blessing that means much-needed rain again tonight. Last week’s storms produced a profusion of blooms…

Tulips_3_14

Daffodils_3_14

Spring-Color_3_14

and delivered a huge undertaking for our rescue – one that we gladly take on. Two van loads; ten dogs; twelve hundred miles to bring them to safety. I’ll be able to share their full story with you soon (as soon as I finish writing it!) Gorgeous all…and all in need of significant care –

Jordan_3_14_DSC_0934

for untreated medical issues –

Buddy_3_14_DSC_1214

and human socialization.

Michael_3_14_DSC_1056

Joseph_DSC_1165

From darkness to light. Like the spring unfolding around them –

Iceland-Poppies_3_14

Lavendar_3_14

Garden_3_14_DSC_0315

the best is yet to be.

Jordan_3_14_DSC_1142

Rain Falling on Sunshine

There is a saying that God made rainy days so gardeners could get housework done. To heck with that.

IrisRain_DSC_0031

We had two storms move through this week. While they didn’t put a significant dent in our drought situation, the rain did bring welcome relief to our thirsty trees and gardens.

Garden_3_12_DSC_0811

Paired with warm temperatures, the flowers, leaves – and weeds – are exploding.

Weed_DSC_0539

So, a showery – sometimes rainy – day was not going to deter us from enjoying the early spring celebration, or getting a jump on weeding. Maria and I arrived early to find the daffodils, tulips and rosemary blooming, the willow tree leafing, and the lawn freshly mowed for the first time this year (thank you, Rob).

Daffodil_DSC_5679

Tulip_DSC_0523

Poppies_DSC_0537

Rosemary_DSC_0521

The rainy day also brought a welcome guest. Tigger went home a month ago as a foster. We do that when a dog is being medically treated to carry the cost of care for the family, and to ensure that all will be well before an adoption is finalized.

Tigger_3_12_DSC_0741S

When Tigger went home, he was suffering from still uncontrolled diarrhea. For that transgression, he had been surrendered to a shelter where his fate would be clear. The team brought him to Homeward Bound.

Tigger_DSC_0801S

While he improved with medications, he needed to be in a stable, home environment. After a month with his amazing new family, his health is back on track, and his weight is up by six pounds.

Tigger_3_12_DSC_0754S

Clearly surrounded by love, he is a totally different – and completely doted upon – dog. His adoption was finalized.

Tigger_3_12_DSC_0725

“Is the spring coming?” he said. “What is it like?”…”It is the sun shining on the rain and the rain falling on the sunshine.” ~ Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden

Tulip_DSC_0814

Bird_DSC_0842

Through the Lens

Iceland-Poppy2_DSC9116

“It pleases me to take amateur photographs of my garden, and it pleases my garden to make my photographs look professional.” ~ Robert Brault

Iris2_DSC8952

I have enjoyed taking amateur pictures of our garden – watching it progress through the seasons and develop over time. But lately, the amateur quality of the photos has been a sense of growing frustration and disappointment instead of joy. So, with appreciation to our Presidents for the three-day weekend, I rented a camera that takes a couple of leaps from my current gear.

Brilliant-Gree_DSC9294
When I started studying painting many moons ago, my student tools were inexpensive gessoed muslin canvas, cheap brushes and acrylic paints. I will never forget the first time I put fine sable brushes and a light oil wash to a linen canvas primed with rabbit skin glue (sorry bunny). The paint had a completely different feel, a brilliance and transparency. It did as I commanded – effortlessly gliding into place. That has been my experience behind the lens this weekend. Not just photographing our budding spring…

White-Iris_DSC9289

Blossoms_DSC9305

Bee_DSC9295

or happy birds…

M.Doves_2_14jpg

M.Dove2_2_14

but the beauty of the dogs –

BoBo_DSC9085

Abagail_DSC9089

Y.Volunteer_2_14

and the delight in the faces of our volunteers and families.

Y-Volunteers_Cassidy_Erin_Victoria

Chester-Going-Home_2_15_14

“If I could tell the story in words, I wouldn’t need to lug around a camera” ~ Lewis Hine

Tuesday, I return the camera and turn back into a pumpkin. But something tells me there is a purchase in my future. So when words are inadequate, I can (happily) share our joy in photographs with you.

Susan-Puppy_DSC9242

Spring in Winter

A declaration of drought has been made official in California – as if it were not obvious.

Dry-California-1_14

With a soil rich in clay, and an abundance of drought hardy perennials, the Memorial Garden has fared better than most so far.

CA-Garden-1_14

We cannot count on that continuing…especially with temperatures in the 70’s in January. Ridiculous. So we’ll just revel in what we have today:

Poppy2-1_14

Signs of spring in winter,

Narcissus-1_14

Crocus-1_14

Poppy-1_14

Lavender-1_14

birds in abundance,

Bird-Seeds2-1_14

Bird-on-Stick-1_14

Geese-1_14

beautiful snowy faces,

Eyelashes-1_25_14

and the company of dogs.

RMK-BoBo2-1_14

Rain dances are, however, welcome.