Tuesday, November 13, 2012

the plant blues

I bought my first house plant sometime in high school. It was some kind of succulent. It was beautiful, but that didn't last, after a few months it was a spindly, tall, awkward looking plant. Per haps it was going through plant puberty (which it would never out grow) to reflect the stage of life I was passing through? I passed it on to my green-thumbed mother and who knows she may still have it growing somewhere.

Well, awhile back I decided to try again. It would be lovely to have some green living things in our apartment. I bought an orchid. It was beautiful. Then slowly but surely the flowers fell off, then the stalks, the growing medium grew mold, and I just noticed the other day that one of it's leaves had turned yellow so I pulled it off. I will admit that it has survived a lot longer than I ever would have thought. I don't know much about orchids so perhaps this is just part of it's normal cycle.

I convinced Adam that it would be nice to have some flowers around again (as our orchid my never bloom again) and it's much cheaper to buy some living begonias than a bouquet. So, some beautiful begonias were placed in a shopping cart, purchased, and not long after graced our table. Well, a month passed and the poor begonia is not the better for it. It followed a similar but much more hasty path to the yard waste bin...(well, that isn't exactly true, I still have both plants on my windowsill but that will be their final destination).
completely unrelated photo of a four leaf clover I found

Why are you bothering us with this you may well ask? The answer? I feel like complaining. Did I miss the green-thumb gene that some in my family clearly have? (check this out for proof).

4 comments:

gigi said...

The same thing happened to my succulent, and then one day Dad accidentally knocked it off the windowsill and it snapped. And don't forget my juniper bonsai...

The Jenkins Family said...

I feel your pain, Katie. I have a very sad-looking houseplant that Mike brought home to me (not quite sure what it is) when we first moved in. It is actually still alive, believe it or not, but it certainly doesn't look happy. Thank goodness we are better at raising kids than we are at raising plants! Ha ha...I miss you and love you. Hope all is well! Give your babies a big hug from me!!

Beth said...

I am so with you on this. You should have seen my entire garden, two years in a row, in Ohio--a place I was told you couldn't NOT get things to grow. HA HA. Why didn't I get that gene either?

By the way, awesome four-leaf clover! You should be very lucky, right?

katie said...

Beth! I actually found 5 shortly after I found the one photographed. So, I must be. :)

Maggie, are you comforting me by eluding to ineptness at house plants?

Lindsay. Thank you for commiserating, and yes at least our children are surviving.