
Yesterday, my dog Ziva and I walked a different direction, not to seek adventure but to find warmth. Every block we put between us and Lake Superior meant more houses to deflect the wind coming off the lake. It helped, but not much. When a cold wind rumbles off the lake, it finds you.
On our walk I saw a long-stemmed rose, and my first impulse was to smell it. Because you should stop to smell the roses, even when it’s 28 degrees and overcast and the sky is sprinkling snowflakes like salt from a shaker. The rose smelled sweet, like the roses my nana grew in the front of her 900-square-foot home, the smallest house by far on her street. Nana prized her roses and tended them with great care. They signaled that she, too, was a lady, even in her tiny home. Her long-stemmed, red roses announced that she had left behind her childhood of deep poverty and great difficulties.
My next impulse was to take a picture of the rose, which looked remarkably good. Amazing because this week’s basket of weather contained strong winds, drenching rains, and even some snow.
But sometimes survival is about luck.
This rose was blessed because its owners planted it in front of their house which works as a shelterbelt, saving it from the worst of the icy winds and horizontal rains that blow off the lake. It was fortunate because it bloomed at the end of a long stem, keeping it off the ground where colder air settles. It was spared because this week’s snow was light and melted quickly, postponing it’s red, velvety petals from freezing and turning brown.
It’s 23 degrees this morning, so the rose’s good fortune won’t hold much longer. But with care and some luck, new roses will bloom again next year.
Lovely!
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Beautiful! “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet” not sure why that popped into my head🤣 🌹
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Funny! That’s the same thing I thought of when I smelled the rose yesterday.
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Hmmmmmmmmmmm. Like a mantra of good feeling: a rose in winter.
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I love the smell of roses! However, it’s rare to find the really great smelling roses, anymore. it seems they have been bred for appearance, weather tolerance or even less thorns to the point they’ve lost their smell. I’ll take the good, old fashioned, thorny, imperfect, sweet-smelling ones, any day.
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My nana had those thorny roses! And when I bent to smell this one, I was expected to be disappointed because roses today don’t seem to have that smell. But this rose had that beautiful rose scent.
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