
Soaking up the sun...
Many plants were still in bloom around here just a few days ago.
Leaving the local library loaded down with books to while away the cold, wintry hours, I halted traffic in the middle of the walkway when I caught sight of one such plant. In front of the old, sagging house across the street stood an eight-foot tall rose pillar literally covered with clear pink flowers, still as lovely as though it were midsummer.
At the nearby botanical garden, the reblooming azaleas were having their day in the sun all over again, as though Easter were just around the corner. The only clue to the season in the picture above is the light, which looks distinctly darker and richer now.
In my own garden, the pineapple sage decided it was time for a last fling, throwing out a spate of red tubular flowers just in the last three weeks. It’s planted very near my front door and is visible from the window where I work, so that I could easily appreciate the ruby-throated hummingbirds’ visits to sip its nectar. Pineapple sage is a hummingbird favorite here. (The hummers all migrated a couple of months ago, however.)
Those tiny blooms were like a flag in the greying landscape, a rebellious banner holding out against the world’s inexorable dying. Perhaps a hundred times in these weeks when I glimpsed them, I thought, “I really should go grab the camera and snap a few pictures. They won’t last long.”
But they kept going, braving night after night of increasing cold. Each morning, the faded leaves of the butterfly bush would be painted with white whorls of frost, and the few unharvested mustard leaves would sparkle in the dawn light. Yet still the pineapple sage glowed scarlet, defying the weather.
“Good job,” I whispered to it as I passed.
But I never remembered to get out the camera. I think I got complacent as it continued to brave it out, seemingly impervious to whatever temperatures came our way. This plant was like The Little Engine That Could — only wearing the traditional scarlet of the caboose. Appropriate, in a way, since these tiny blooms were the very last to grace my garden.
Of course, now they are toast. We’ve been having some truly bitter cold these last few days. Today we’ll barely top 42° F (6° C). I miss seeing those defiant little red blossoms outside my window. And I really wish I’d taken the time to get those photos.
Just a few minutes, that’s all it would have taken. Why did I put it off?
In honor of the pineapple sage, may I suggest we each do one small thing today that we’ve been putting off? Something meaningful, if possible.
We won’t regret it.







