Leaves come down in shimmering displays, or drop noisily when the air is calm. This morning I took the dogs for their wood walk among dancing branches. When we reached the dry creek bed it was a mosaic of yellow and orange leaves instead of bare stones.
Yesterday I was out in the woods wearing the baby in a carrier. I looked up and discovered little yellow streamers adorning a shrub no taller than myself. A witch hazel was blooming, if such a grandiose term could be used for such pale, haphazard flowers. I’ve wanted to see this for two years and now I realized why I’d overlooked them. The leaves they shared branches with were more striking. I had pictured something similar to spring-flowering shrubs, like serviceberry which blooms white against a leafless forest.
The more I looked around, though, the more witch hazel I noticed. The flowers became little treasures which rewarded my closer looks. An understated pleasure in a flamboyant season.
4 comments:
I love your blog and I keep trying to think of WHO you ARE? Seems like if I don't know you I should.
Did you harvest some of them? are witch hazel flowers used or is it another part of the plant?
Jessica - you and your family look vaguely familiar... I post as little identifying information here as I can, but maybe there's a clue in how you heard about my blog.
Michellemo - it's actually the leaves and bark which are used, but I try to limit my disturbance of native plants. Current levels of wild collection do not appear to be threatening witch-hazel in the eastern US and southern Canada according to NatureServe (http://www.natureserve.org), so I'm not saying it's wrong. It's just not the kind of relationship I personally want to cultivate with our woods. But it's complicated of course, because I do eat raspberries etc. Someday I may do a post about my complicated and imperfect philosophy regarding wild edibles.
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