First of all, I hope you all had a good laugh at my expense yesterday (cheaper than Pizza Hut!), and didn't go away with the mistaken idea that Tessa is in my bad books! On the contrary, she's a lovely lady, well worth getting acquainted with if you aren't already. Her beautiful paintings will brighten up your darkest day just as her writing will brighten up your mind and heart.
Now, back to the title. Sadly I haven't just invented an extermination incantation to deal with the little yellow peril, but as it has featured in so many blogs recently, I couldn't let the opportunity pass to ponder once again on its inevitable end - a dandelion clock-cum time bomb... It really is one of the most beautiful spectacles Nature has ever created; spherical, fragile wisps forming their own globe of potential re-birth, but pale and insipid colour-wise. A huge contrast to the vivid acid yellow of its hey-day.
Last year, I invested in a true instrument of torture (for weeds only, may I add). Rather like an overgrown apple corer, the blade on the end of the long, red pole, circles the weed as you push into the earth, then outer lugs lever the unwanted plant up, as a corkscrew removes a cork from the bottle. Providing the ground isn't too rock hard, its a wonderful method of clearing the lawn of weeds, with no back-breaking, stooping required.
But no matter how many dandelions are executed in this way, there will always be some that make it to their 'End Of Their Road' - and turn into those seed laden, life-cycle conclusions.
One grey dawn, I spotted a group of them on the grass verge at the end of my road, as I made my way to work, and the following lines were born by the time I'd walked to the station and caught the train. Once in the office I put them down on paper, little thinking that I'd be broadcasting them around Blogland one day, even as the plants broadcast their seeds around Havant...
Fruition, Perhaps
Ghost-grey puffball heads
of seeding dandelions
shed their multitudinous progeny
to ride the winds of chance
in life's uncertain lottery.
So a poet's multifarious words
float at the mercy of other minds,
perhaps to take root and yield
an unexpected harvest
in some far flung, fallow field
of uncultivated poesy.
We, too, have one of those weed-pulling contraptions. While they work well for the moment, they seldom if ever pull the whole root, and that means the plant will return. That's my experience anyway. Maybe I'm just a clumsy weed-puller-outer.
ReplyDeleteThis is a spectacular poem!!!! I adore it!!!!!! You are really terrific!!!! And I'm so glad I found you!!!!! ~Janine XO
ReplyDeleteI know Guy would be delighted to get one of those weed corers, but I'm not going to tell him about your handy contraption because I love those yellow puffs that appear the day after he has done the mowing! Oh, and the camomile...there's something so romantic and English about them sitting about so daintily on the lawn. They remind me of Helena Bonham-Carter before she went all weird and wild in Sweeny Todd.
ReplyDeletePerfect poem, Jinksy, and you wrote it in your head on the way to work? Bloomin' marvellous!
That's a lovely poem!
ReplyDeleteYou know, if God didn't want dandelions to be so prolific, he wouldn't have made the puffballs so inviting for little children to pluck and blow at.
I like to think of your words floating in cyberspace like the seeds on a dandelions clock, Jinksy - lovely image.
ReplyDeleteLove your poem, Ms. Jinksy! My neighbors, who try mightily to keep their lawns dandelion free, must want to strangle me; I have no inclination whatsoever to root dandelions out of my yard. I enjoy the bright, cheerful yellow of the new flowers (which, by the way, attract gold finches) and revel in the downy puffballs as much as my four year old granddaughter. She and I are enjoying plucking the seed heads and giving them a good send off.
ReplyDeleteI love anything that grows and is colourful - that's my excuse for a weedy garden and I'm sticking to it. Lovely poem Jinksy.
ReplyDeleteWonderful poem. I really like that second stanza...as I'm reading it for the third time. And now a fourth - noooo! I'm at the mercy of your mind. I can't pull away.
ReplyDeleteA fifth time...sixth (post comment now!)
This I like! I happen to like both dandelions and poetry. Why fight it?
ReplyDeleteGhost-grey puffball heads
ReplyDeleteof seeding dandelions
shed their multitudinous progeny
to ride the winds of chance
in life's uncertain lottery.
Brilliant!
Love the title. A+
ReplyDeleteI loved your poem. Dandelion puffs are poetic in themselves. I think you should welcome them!
ReplyDeleteWell dandelions are the bane of my lawn, I mean life.
ReplyDeleteDaisies are much prettier. ;0)
Dents de lion have taken over the earth this year - There seem to be acres of thm - Must be the drier conditions. I love their bright energy, I must admit, la Jinks! Just like your energy that makes you write such clever poetry!
ReplyDeleteoh..it's a beautiful poem, indeed.
ReplyDeleteI love dandelions, I let them grow wild in my garden, I used to "fight" them, but, as they always win, I surrendered...now I enjoyed them :-)
I grew up with multitudinous dusty bottles of homemade dandelion wine in our basement. Thanks for the memory. I guess my daddy believed in the adage "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em."
ReplyDelete