Mayflower Crowning by Sara Wright

I sit under the snowy crabapple as fragile flower petals drift one by one to the ground, covering my hair in white butterflies, soon to become the first mulch of the year. Our Lady is always nourishing new life…

 The hum of a thousand bees is deafening – bumblebees – glorious golden rotund bodies swarming from one tree to another with so many relatives – everyone seeking sweet nectar.

The scent is beyond description – intoxicating – a poignant perfume lasting only a few days and keeping me rooted to my bench every single morning to soak in the sweetness under impossible heat. Heavily polluted air is thick and metallic but here I inhale a plethora of fragrances so intense they drown out poisoned air.

One rose breasted grosbeak is hidden in the deep vermillion of the fruit tree that bears his name. No wonder he sings his heart out. A red eyed vireo’s musical trill provides striking counterpoint even at noon. Phoebes chirp as they gather feathery mosses for their nest above my door. I gather more and add strands of my hair depositing both gifts on the ground in front of their flowering crab situated just outside my door. In moments both treasures are gone, swooped away by nesting parents

The Flower Moon has just passed and many spring wildflowers have come to crown the Queen of the May who is dressed in her glorious cherry, apple, pear, crabapple finery. Swaying wild grasses hold spikes of lavender, blue, and purple ajuga, periwinkled myrtle is festooned with liny gold bees. Violets of every conceivable shade cover the ground along with astonishing neon yellow dandelions. Solomon’s seal arc so gracefully bending pendulous bells to the ground. Chartreuse and lime paint a ground cover named charlie, a sinuous serpent creeper that slithers across the uncut grass seemingly choosing every direction at once. No mow sparks endless creativity.

I am poised, a lady in waiting for relief.

And then they come!

The Thunders.

 Rumbling sky gods split and sever dead air in hope. Many fruit trees have weeping leaves that droop under a brutal noonday sun. Cracked brown earth opens her slumbering eyes. Earthworms driven deep in this intolerable heat, hide among delicate mycelial threads who are funneling nitrogen potassium, water, minerals and other nutrients to those that need them… Tree roots are singing songs to this tubular informational highway lightly hidden underground.

 Ah, and so it begins, the deluge, sheets of silver hitting the ground in a fury… the sound of ionized water slapping roof and tree sooths my aching head still pounding from metallic air and merciless heat.

 I become this storm all senses on fire with longing. Presence. Rain, a blessing for all, even the flowers bend their heads in prayer.

During breaks in the torrent hummingbirds zoom in to the feeder. One chickadee appears from a tangle of fruit tree branches, grabs a seed and disappears Another follows suit.

After the Thunder gods move on a female rain begins (as Indigenous folks say) falling in time with fluttering petals, crimson, rose, burgundy, pale pink, mauve and pearl. How gently all spiral earthward.

Too soon the storm is over, but the Mayflower Queen has reigned in flowery splendor for a week that ends in a nourishing watery reprieve. She will soon retire for another year after the last blushing pink crabapples fade ending the Celebration of the Trees in this hollow on a waning moon. And leaving the earth to celebrate more stars, spiked jewels, and impossible fragrances for another month The solstice fire may burn them out but not until all have set seed before summer begins!

Author: Sara Wright

I am a writer and naturalist who lives in a little log cabin by a brook with my two dogs and a ring necked dove named Lily B. I write a naturalist column for a local paper and also publish essays, poems and prose in a number of other publications.

4 thoughts on “Mayflower Crowning by Sara Wright”

  1. Another beautiful piece that is like taking a walk with and learning from you! It strikes me how often native plants seem to have only a short blooming season, a week or two. My sister’s heirloom rose, grown from a cutting of a bush that grew a century or so ago, is the same — maybe blooming for a week, but so abundant for that week! I wonder if cultivated plants are altered to bloom longer. But it makes me appreciate the native blooms more when I know that I need to go see them on their schedule or miss their show. It’s a lesson in time, for sure, and living in the present and enjoying every moment.

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    1. Native wildflowers are timed to work with the rest of nature – to bloom and set seed before summer heat strikes – one reason to support all early spring pollinators with wildflowers -( the birds are the same) – – When we buy or acquire plants for summer blooms unless we stay we stay with natives our bees don’t get the help they need we do not overall support nature’s web, but our own needs… that’s ok especially if we plant native summer flowers like wild roses lupine milkweed let goldenrod and wild asters etc flourish…somewhere on our property The crabapple you see in the picture is one ALL the bees love and now this morning it is covered with swallowtails as well as bees.. all my fruit trees were put in the ground before we grew plants and trees the way we do now – ( artificially )- and I have wild apples too – watching insects will tell the tale – today’s cultivars attract few – oh yeah – ants love this tree too and it is the only one that is still blooming….

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  2. What a wonderful description of May in your area, and of a thundershower and rain. I love it! I’m grateful for the recent rain, too, and for the flowers that bloom in May and the new leaves and unfurling ferns. It is such a magical time and you captured it perfectly.

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