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Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Grapes and Bees

Spring is definitely here. Yesterday afternoon it was eighty degrees out. In the grocery store, grapes are suddenly affordable again. Bow and I are taking advantage of the opportunity,


He was grunting with pleasure when he had his bunch of grapes for breakfast yesterday.


Bow also spent many hours outdoors on his bench, while I roamed the grounds spying all the sudden transformations that the warm weather has wrought.


The hyacinth by the front door is blooming.


The peach trees in the orchard have opened their blossoms. And no sooner had they bloomed, than they began to attract busy little bees.


Bees began to swarm by the fruit trees.


They seem to know exactly what flowers are available.


Some flowers, however, are more popular than others. For instance, though the new trees that were planted only last fall are also blooming, they do not attract any bees.


And although we might suppose that all the flowers growing on the same tree or bush are equal. no such equality is to be found in nature. Even on the forsythia bush, which is now in full bloom, some flowers just seem to stand out.


What is it about this particular bloom that makes it dance in front of me, as if shouting: "Look at me! Look at me! I am different from all the others!"


No two mountains have the same height and no two stalks of grain are equal, as the great Russian writer, Alexei Tolstoy, once wrote. (No, not the author of War and Peace. That was somebody else) There is no such thing as absolute, factual equality. Which brings me to my new book, Our Lady of Kaifeng: Courtyard of the Happy Way.  It has been published, and people all over the world are receiving copies even as I write.

Order from Amazon
My friend Julia just recently got her copy.


This is a good time to order my new book. And if you do, it will make it that much easier for me and Bow to buy more grapes to have for breakfast!


4 comments:

  1. Bow looks contemplative in the last photo as he eats his grapes.

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  2. Yum, what a good idea - grapes for breakfast! This has been a very, very warm spring. I'm worried that all the buds and blooms will get zapped in a late-spring freeze!

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    1. Hi, Kathy. Grapes for breakfast has been a longstanding tradition with us, but we had to suspend it when grape prices skyrocketed. It's good to see them more reasonably priced.

      I hope it doesn't freeze again this spring, as it would undo the hard work of the flowers and the bees.

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