Ah, these mellow autumn days, with a fat golden sun being born after a cool grey morning.  I felt myself coming down from the stress of the past weeks as I played in the garden today.  I came in smiling, with my left hand full of seeds for next year’s cardinal climber vines and the fingers of my right hand splayed to hold two fat green tomatoes, my camera swinging from the strap around my neck.

F. gave me an approving look, and I answered him in words, “I feel like I’m becoming me again.”  He smiled and nodded.  He knows.

That’s what the garden does for me sometimes.  Often, even.  Restoration.

I felt like I’d been swallowing sunshine, nourished by the moist red earth, caressed by the wingtips of the chickadees as they continued to crisscross the blue sky overhead, flying to the feeder on the back porch, undisturbed by my meanderings down below.

And meander is the right word.  I couldn’t bring myself to do any hard work yet, even though there is tons to do right now in the kitchen garden.  Of course there is:  I’ve only managed the bare minimum of activity there for the past two weeks.

Things are a real mess, if looked at from a certain angle.  But if looked at from the right angle — oh, bliss!

Isn’t it amazing how this little insect’s eyes are a precise color match with the seed-in-formation he’s grasping?  (Click the picture above to get a close-up.)  I have no knowledge of him, his purpose, whether he’s just resting, soaking up the sun or gathering pollen, drinking nectar, or even doing something that would shock me if I ever learned the details, perhaps.  But I didn’t need knowledge to appreciate him this afternoon.

Facts would just have gotten in the way; don’t you think?

Instead I just soaked up his presence, standing on a patch of bark-chipped path that’s slowly giving way to weeds and encroaching grass, with the sun warm on my shoulders, the gentlest of breezes caressing my cheek, and a train whistle sounding in the distance.

A moment of pure joy.

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What is it with the bugs this week?  First the fire ants, then the designer mystery bug, then the bumblebee with fat knees, then the ladybug-in-a-raincoat bug.  I think I ought to belatedly declare this to be insect theme week on Victory Garden Redux.

This little one was afraid of me, unfortunately.  After the first flash, she scooted away from me.  After the second, I looked up and she’d disappeared.  She turned out to be hiding on the underside of the okra leaf.  And when I poked my head under there to check on her, she freaked out and flew way over to the remaining tomato plants.  I tried to follow discreetly.  But she saw me coming and made hell-for-leather for the treeline.

Still, she’s lovely.  I would be her true blue friend if she would let me.  She was just conscious enough of me and my potential to not give me that chance.

However, I am already her true blue friend, although she doesn’t know it, in that the area under my control does not contain any substances that will harm her.  Unless she has a natural predator.  In that case, don’t blame me for how Mother Nature constructed this eat-and-be-eaten planet.  I can’t quite figure it out, either.

If that part of the plan bothers you a bit, too, I highly recommend a read through Annie Dillard’s A Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.  Not that she finds all the answers.  Or any of them, really.  It’s just that she wrestles with the questions in such a beautiful and poignant way that reading it will actually change you.

(This tiny bit of robin’s egg blue — and it was even more gorgeous in person — was all I could find for Capturing Beauty‘s Rainbow Challenge.  Good thing this is the last Blue Thursday in September.  I love blue, and yet it never occurred to me until doing this challenge that I planted almost no blue in the Victory Garden — an oversight I’ll have to remedy next year.)

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