#1 is a bush by the sea
and a seabird nesting within.
Anything can be a garden.
#2 is a topiary: my mother
near tears after buying the wrong wooden planks
for the vegetable box last summer.
They aren't as tall as I thought, she says
but pushes on, piercing bags of soil
with her spade to overflow the box
because she is too determined and that will be her downfall.
#3 sits by the window with the most sun.
We moved our fig tree inside once we noticed
how the deer loved those fragrant leaves. And now
the figs are finally coming in, but we miss the deer.
#4 people call Oriental
when they feel threatened by its perfect shapes
and perfect control. This garden is a popular choice
for photoshoots and old couples craving a bench. I'll admit
to taking a photo near its magnificent red gate,
wondering who built it
and what they looked like.
#5 is not picturesque, but it thrives.
Grandma scavenged her garden together
and secured it with chicken wire and zip ties. A sole pumpkin grows hanging: regal and perfect.
#6 smells like death and our dog knows this too.
On mornings when the grass is wet, I catch him digging up the compost
because he is not afraid of me. I saw him once emerge
with an unbroken eggshell between his jaw.
#7 is a hackjob on the side of the road. The berries
are too sweet and too polluted to eat. I recall that my grandparents
sold berries roadside to survive. Once we made cobbler.
#8 was beautiful and belonged to an old couple.
I was called there as a Census worker and they did not speak English.
I remember they were drying seaweed on boards in the driveway
next to pots of huge beefsteak tomatoes. As I left,
some of the seaweed was carried away by the wind
and I didn't want them to think it was me.
#9 I saw on a rooftop in the city and the first word
that came to my mind was oasis. I felt bad
but that was winter anyways.
#10 was three boxes on a steep hill behind Grandma's old house.
From the upper window, the reek of grandpa's cigarettes
settled on purple beans, later to be mixed into rice,
later to be eaten by Grandpa. The same fumes cycled back
through his system until they wanted out.
#11 happened because I wanted my own snap peas.
The vines gripped the trellis like baby hands, so quickly.
#12-#28 burned down in a fire, unseen on TV.
#29-#44 are still lost in the smoke.