Showing posts with label trumpet vine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trumpet vine. Show all posts

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Once again it’s April

by Pat Laster

Oh, oh, oh! The vining wisteria that twines around a truncated tree (left especially to host the vine) is in bud! Unlike the bush wisteria that grows low and blooms a solid-purple mass, the American Wisteria (so called in Carl G. Hunter’s book, Trees, Shrubs, & Vines of Arkansas, 2nd edition, 1995) blooms later than “the cultivated forms.”
Also, the vine that I thought was a white-blossomed vinca isn’t. It’s blooming for the first time since it came up by the mailboxes. The buds are maroon capsules. On the underside is a hole with a white stamen that reminds me of a jack-in-the-pulpit.
Voila! One of the buds became a flower with a deep throat of maroon and a yellow flange or collar. By next week, I will have found out the name from my uncle John Pelton, the wildflower buff and photographer.
Until then, here is some April trivia.
BOOKS: Across Five Aprils by Irene Hunt; April Moon (Harlequin); April Morning – Howard Fast; The Enchanted April – Elizabeth Von Arnim.
SONGS: “April is in my Mistress’ Face”-old madrigal-Thomas Morley; “April Showers” – Silvers/De Sylva, published in 1921; “April” –recorded by Deep Purple (band); “April Lady” – recorded by Queen; “Pieces of April” – Three Dog Night; “April Fool” – Soul Asylum; “April Love” – Pat Boone (Webster & Fain); “April Come She Will” – Simon and Garfunkel; “April in Paris” – Frank Sinatra.
NAMES: April Mae, Aprille, Aprilynne.
AUTHOR: Aprilynne Pike – Wings.
MUSICIAN: Johnny April, bass player for the hard-rock band Staind, gave $150,000 to buy a new ambulance for six rural, western-Massachusetts towns.
IMPORTANT EVENTS THIS WEEK: April 5 – 1640 – marriage of Pocahontas; April 6 – Robert Edwin Peary reached the North Pole in 1909; April 7 – 1827 – matches were first sold; April 8 – 1973 – Pablo Picasso, Spanish painter, died at age 91; April 8 – Buddha’s birthday; Zen Buddhists use this day as a flower festival to celebrate; April 9 – 1806 – Great Western Railway born; April 10 – signing of the Good Friday Agreement or Belfast Agreement (Information from projectbritain.com.); April 11 – a barren period. Do no planting. (from Farmers’ Almanac 2012)
ANAGRAM FOR APRIL: Think Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls.
WHAT SOME WRITERS SAID ABOUT APRIL:
Shakespeare: “April has put a spirit of youth in everything.”
Mark Twain: “The first of APRIL is the day we remember what we are the other 364 days of the year.”
Hal Borland: “April is a promise that May is bound to keep.”
T. S. Eliot: “April is the cruelest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain.”
Edna St. Vincent Millay: “April comes like an idiot, babbling and stewing/strewing flowers.” (Some sites write “stewing”; some “strewing,” which makes more sense to me. Let’s see if I can find that book of her poems I once bought at a Eureka Springs flea market.)
Since April is also National Poetry Month, indulge me, please:

“Petit Jean in April”
Slender
sapling on mountain
path stretches skyward; at its feet
three pale blue
Phoenix violets rise above
winter’s leafy, brushwoodsy
blanket.” (a Cameo pattern)

c 2012 by Pat Laster dba lovepat press