Tag Archives: flowers

THE RAINS CAME AND CAME AND CAME

Photo by Bud Jenkins on Pexels.com

We keep thinking

it cannot become any worse

this placid earth 

awash in excess or in drought.

Hibiscus big as dinner pates

strung among drenched leaves,

hangs in drooping loops to the ground.

Sun makes its way warily

through clouds weighing the sky down,

new-born leaves water-logged and drowned.

The heavy weight of watered threats

is nearly too much to bear.

Too heavy to breathe, saturated, air

keeps me waiting inside,

Parched lips and  dry-aged skin

too thin to accept such weight again,

hangs loose, losing all pride;

jealous of the hibiscus

which still stands tall

strong enough to resist it all.

I anxiously await a break in the clouds,

days of hope and rest in the sun.

Even the earth is in tears these days.

Like a child I hold my sign and sing aloud

“Rain, rain, go away. Come again

another day.” Or not. Never again

should we women and men

so misbehave and reduce our gardens to tears.

Photo by Mariya B. on Pexels.com

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WEEDS

Photo by Marta Nogueira on Pexels.com

I love every root and branch

and bud and leaf and flower

holding tight potential

of their power

to change the earth

to a thing of beauty.

I even love the weeds,

especially the weeds

who grow between the cracks

in spaces where it seems

all nourishment and bounty lacks.

Weeds like me who do not match

the temper of the garden crowded

with well-trained and tended

seedlings following the garden pattern.

Such weeds seek light despite

the darkness hidden from view

which holds them tight

as they struggle and wage war

against the forces of cement

paving the way for others meant

to get ahead and reach their goal.

Weed’s only goal is to survive.

And yet weeds seem to thrive

when droughts abound

and heavy rains drown

roots tenderly planted

by those in charge

killing gardens which once delighted

and now appear blighted.

Weeds persist as they resist

the easy way, no easy prey

for those who grow bouquets

not for their own intrinsic value,

but to pick and tie with ribbon

that they may tie down the recipient

to whom they are given,

happy not to have to

deal with weeds.

Weeds are stronger than they.

Weeds survive the darkest days.

A world without weeds

would be a sorry place, indeed.

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ABUNDANT CHANGE

Acrylic on canvas by Louise Annarino 2/18/2025

Hope is in the soil beneath our feet

Ready to grow seeds in the lengthening days

Until beautiful souls flower and fill our needs.

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SPRING WILL COME AGAIN

ALWAYS HOPE FOR SPRING, acrylic on canvass, Louise Annarino, 2024

It has always been

understood and too often

forgotten. Spring comes.

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LATE SUMMER DAZE

LATE SUMMER, acrylic on canvass by Louise Annarino, 2024

The shades of summer pull slowly closed.

Sun drops quietly behind.

Shadows lengthen across grass carpets

moistened by the dew of cool nights

and warm days peaking through.

Autumn is on her way to paint

hot colors against cool blue skies.

Summer still lingers behind the shade

ready to surprise 

with summer heat intent

on a hot reprise.

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Late Summer

Acrylic on canvass by Louise Annarino, 8-7-2024

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WHERE HAVE THE BUTTERFLIES GONE?

Photo by Nandhu Kumar on Pexels.com

Hydrangeas move as if on a breeze.

A breeze of bees moving flower to flower

across lime green, blue and pink.

Across ruby red and native plants

their flowers do a pretty dance.

On this hot, dry day I watch bees play.

But, where have the butterflies gone?

They did not appear this year.

The yard is awash in colorful blooms

In past years butterflies found plenty of room

to feast and sleep a moment or two.

Butterfly bushes and  butterfly weeds,

native plants and other species

await their return in sad revery.

I ask everyone I know,

“have you seen a butterfly this year?”

The answer is always a baffled, “No.”

Where did all the butterflies go?

And, will they ever return ?

Who knows? Like lovers spurned,

they may have found another garden

to replace my own. 

I can only hope so, as I mourn

a topsy-survey world grown too warm.

Photo by Scott Webb on Pexels.com

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SHADE GARDEN

Lane to Priestacott by Derek Harper is licensed under CC-BY-SA 2.0

It is hard to flower in the shade.

Floral display is for the bees

and pollinators who see

the value and possibility

of a plant to survive beyond its seed.

Nectar moves with pollen from darkest night

and plants mingle and join in plain sight,

to be more and to do more

than simply survive. They strive to thrive.

In deep shade plants may stay alive.

Hosta flowers with a single note.

Its flower pulses high above leaves long and wide,

a surprise symphony of  courage and pride.

Flowers who manage to grace the dark

appear as pale as moonlight,

or tiny and overly bright as minuscule suns,

miniature versions of sun-garden cousins.

Shade gardens offer a place to hide

amid dark plants struggling to flower

when one knows one cannot.

The smallest birds and animals shelter there

beneath broad leaves, safe from hawks

and others who prey on such as they.

When the shine of bright light and heat of sun

becomes too much, we run

to shelter in the shade, listen to its music,

dance on its cool earth, and have some fun.

Flowers would be nice.

Sun’s beauties have a price

some of us cannot afford to pay.

Peace comes in the darkest glades.

I happily, and lovingly, sit in the shade.

Photo by Dagmara Dombrovska on Pexels.com

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HAIKU

Winter Garden

WINTER GARDEN, acrylic on canvass, Louise Annarino

I watch the garden grow

beneath the blanket of snow,

waiting to emerge.

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MEMORIES

The hummers have left with the long sunny days.

Frost settled down and intends to stay.

All that is left of the hummingbirds feeding in my yard

are memories of their daily visits and aeronautic repertoire.

I miss their dancing forms as they move from flower to flower.

I am left with cloudy days that drag out lonely hours.

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