Showing posts with label neighbors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neighbors. Show all posts

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Not my Hydrangeas

In front of my small suburban home is a row of hydrangeas. We purchased the home in March, when they were still twigs poking up in front of the porch. As the leaves flushed out, I began anticipating the blooms. Blue? Purple? Pink? It all depended upon the soil.

As I started yardwork, and the buds began forming on the tips of the branches, passers-by started saying hello. A neighbor leaned over the fence and remarked, "Those are the most beautiful hydrangeas in all of Hanover." I started at them a moment, smiling, nodding, and remarking, "Thanks."

But for what? I had not planted them here, and though I have a front lawn, I park in the back, use the backdoor, and only occasionally sit on my front porch.

Two days later, a Mennonite lady walked by while I was ripping out rampant spring onion and remarked, "Every year, I take a picture of my grand daughter in front of those hydrangeas."

What was I supposed to say? I had yet to see the plants bloom, and I wasn't sure if I wanted to invite some random woman to take pictures in front of the house that I'd bought and paid for.

With slight hesitation, I responded, "Well, you're welcome to keep doing that once they start blooming." And she responded as if relieved with gratitude and thanks.

I pushed my bandana back, tightening the my ponytail with a tug, and continued weeding.

When they bloomed a week later, my lawn was host to blue fireworks and shades of purple and pink, like cotton candy in petal form. I snagged my own camera, and though I have no grandchildren, I began taking snapshots.

Over the course of the following weeks and months (as hydrangeas' blooms last all summer) I had several neighbors and passersby stop, take pictures, pose in front of these plants.

I wasn't the one that planted them. They're not my hydrangeas. I own the home, the land they grow on, but they are everyone's hydrangeas, and the woman who passed, leaving this home to sold, they are her hydrangeas, and I think she left these hydrangeas to everyone.