Manawatu Standard

The best is yet to come

Won’t it be fine when the flowers burst into life? Beginner gardener on a budding affair.

- Julia Atkinson-dunn

As a pretty fresh gardener in just my fourth growing season, I amsurprise­d that my enthusiasm hasn’t waned. In all honesty, I have a track record of launching into projects and applying myself solidly for a good two years, then feeling like it’s at least somewhat complete and moving onto the next thing.

The opposite is happening tomewhen it comes to my garden.

I know any wise gardener out there reading this will be nodding in understand­ing. Every success a gardening adventure awards pulls you deeper into the obsession, and it’s unlikely you’ll ever emerge from this one.

I surprised myselfmid-garden wander the other morning (my second of the day), when I was eyeballing the progress of my rudbeckia, echinacea, poppies, salvia, snapdragon­s, scabiosa and dahlias, among others.

I was up close and personal with their weird and wonderful buds, whispering sweet nothings to them and muttering they were ‘‘much earlier this year’’. I zoomed out to a bird’s-eye view of this redhaired 39-year-old stalking her backyard in a botanic trance and was slightly weirded out!

It felt odd to recognise that my previous few years of feverish research and experiment­ation have now given me a base of reference to

The glossy drops of dahlia buds still developing beside their sisters who are in full relationsh­ip with pollinator­s gives such promise.

regard the seasonal behaviour of my own wee patch.

How amazing that I – a former non-grower – even have an inkling about my dahlias’ normal schedule.

At the risk of sounding overly soppy, my monitoring of these beautiful strange buds marks anothermil­estone inwhat has been awholly surprising journey.

With less tripping over the basics of growing, I now have time to notice the detail.

I’m no longer only on the pursuit of arriving at the ‘‘main show’’ in the height of summer.

Instead, I find myselfmarv­elling at each day’s changes and each season’s quirks.

The alien heads of my poppies cracking to reveal a hint of burgundy silk one day, only to reveal their full tulle blooms the next quite frankly astounds me. The glossy drops of dahlia buds still

JULIA ATKINSON-DUNN

developing beside their sisters who are in full relationsh­ip with pollinator­s gives such promise. It would be easy to wax lyrical on this all day...

I ama sucker for the arrival of a new year and the delicious potential it holds with the click-over of the calendar but I feel equally buoyed by the annual arrival of my ‘‘bud season’’. It’s a period that feels like being at a pre-drinks event, getting ready for the best party.

These buds promise action, not a guaranteed result, but forward motion that’s motivating in a way I didn’t expect. It signals that I managed to grow something, a simple joy in itself, but also reminds me that no party or project is immediate and the process is of coursewher­e the subtle, but equally lovely, work happens.

After my maximum romanticis­ing of buds being powerful symbols of new life and possibilit­y, I arrive once again to what I now already know. This gardening game has become one of the most enriching projects of my life and if I amonly reaching bud appreciati­on now, stand by for fullblown soil microbe hero-worshippin­g this time next year.

I hope all curious gardeners-to-be might find that 2021 presents them with the chance to meet the motivation of a bud or two soon.

Gardening might well be the project with no completion date that you have been looking for.

 ??  ?? Some dahlias are in full bloom, but the waxy, tightly packed buds promise more delight in the future.
Some dahlias are in full bloom, but the waxy, tightly packed buds promise more delight in the future.
 ?? JULIA ATKINSONDU­NN ?? From far left: Delicate thalictrum buds, scabiosa set to burst forth, and snapdragon buds sit atop the blooms.
JULIA ATKINSONDU­NN From far left: Delicate thalictrum buds, scabiosa set to burst forth, and snapdragon buds sit atop the blooms.
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