Fresh from the tree awaiting toast with cream cheese for breakfast |
Peaches grow almost effortlessly and a tree starts producing quickly. (Not to mention they attract birds - and other things - all of which I am not sure if I love or not.)
a variety of fruit wood prunings |
I swear it is true.
I make a bouquet of sticks every winter.
I call it my
'miracle of the sticks'.
(I look at them and feel a bit foolish - I am not sure why ... )
They always bloom - but what if ...
Try it - it is amazing to see the buds pop out of those dry sticks.
Naking Cherry branches - always prolific and usually first open |
If they are pruned nearer to spring they bloom sooner than if they are pruned earlier - peaches open readily.
Really - just put them in water, like a bouquet, and wait.
Peach buds are gloriously bright pink and as leaves creep almost unnoticed into the cool of spring ...
the buds open slowly at first, held back by the cold
but then the tree is suddenly in full flower with buds and blooms everywhere - until many of them succumb to frost biting just before dawn in many late springs.
Peaches start out as funny elongated furry silver balls that get bigger
and bigger
and bigger
and as they get fuller and rounder
they stay very green all summer
even when they start to show some red under the fuzz.
Nevertheless the narrow leaves and plump fruit are pleasing to just look at - and anticipate.
There is no hurrying peaches.
Whenever I remember how wonderful they are to eat I weed and water and dig about the tree and surrounding garden.
And as I walk past I pat the tree on the trunk or a branch or pet a nearby cheek of fuzz (carefully, lest an earwig is lurking along a crevice or in a leaf - yikes!!).
I admit I look to see if the peaches are coloring and I feel the heaviness that draws the branches into my reach.
I know to look for a ripe one when the morning bird choir and twittering swooping and hopping among the leaves becomes almost constant.
It is then a contest. Who will win the battle of the peaches?
This year it was pretty much a dead heat - but they were cheating - they started eating green, hard fruit -
and complaining did not stop them;
neither did shouting at them or waving my arms.
I suppose I am still greedy - at least about peaches. I even told Cynthia that the naughty birds were eating her peaches and encouraged her to run and shout, "MINE," at them.
I suppose I am still learning to share.
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