Skyscrapers for Orange Mound
Four months ago, I sprinkled a few handfuls of a hybrid sunflower seed in our freshly constructed most Northern garden box at The House. We had received nourishing, rich dirt from Memphis City Beautiful, and we added compost from my decomposed pile of used tea leaves. The garden box was ingeniously irrigated by our long-time contractor friend, Dwayne Jones’ crew, and the sun exposure was the suggested maximum on the tiny seed packet. The conditions were perfect for sunflowers to flourish, and we would not need to water or weed.
The miracle of burying a seed that generates a small plant, unfurls a flower, and brings forth many seeds is repeated throughout the world every spring. The Parable of the Sower cautions that not all the seeds will mature, depending on the conditions. Apparently, our setting for a few of the seeds was superb.
While we delighted in our familiar annual plantings of tomatoes, peppers, corn, and lima beans, we marveled over the fast-emerging nubs of the sunflowers that outpaced everything and began to shade the eggplants in box #2. Within the short month of June, we saw more than we had imagined possible. We had a forest of very thick-leaved, twelve-inch-diameter sunflower trees with flowers the size of large pizzas. They had grown too tall for us to clip and bring in for decoration, and if we had a ladder to do so, there wasn’t a vase that could support a flower unless we repurposed a Home Depot bucket.
Did I mention above that the seeds were called Skyscrapers?
They grew just short of the power lines on Semmes, and the utility workmen preparing for the fiber-optic cables to come stared menacingly at them and us.
Last week in preparation for planting in the fall, Sandy, a regular volunteer for years, and I brought our personal chainsaws and began our untapped lumberjack roles of cutting down the forest in Box # 1. We prevailed and then attacked the 15-pound root balls under each one with the same dedication.
The 20 actual sunflowers clipped from the felled trees weighed between 3 and 6 pounds each. My pleasure has evolved into harvesting the seeds from the cut and dried flowers and planning how we will plant sunflowers in all the vacant lots in Orange Mound. I am not overstating that I have plucked at least two thousand Skyscraper seeds from only five of the flowers.
I grew up singing about Johnny Appleseed, and I only need to change one word to make it fit. It begins:
“Oh! The Lord’s been good to me/and so I thank the Lord/for giving me the things I need/ the sun and the rain and the sunflower seed/Oh! The Lord’s been good to me.”
A friend challenged me to write a story, and I thought the valiant seed deserved a poem. Read below.
Sunflowers rise, bright, saucy, and bold.
Promises of Summer, as their potential unfolds.
From one empowered kernel, the Skyscraper stands,
Fifteen feet high, reaching upward like hands.
Summer ore, seeds gathered, rest through fall and frost,
In spring’s warm embrace, they awaken, not lost.
With sun and with water, the cycle renews,
From one tiny seedling, a forest ensues.
Tall as trees, golden petals debut to display
Beauty and joy in their vibrant parade.
Though grass will wither, and flowers will fade,
God’s Word endures, a foundation well laid.
Life and truth in each season's measured return,
In the heart of a seed, endless lessons we learn.
Let us marvel at Creation’s miraculous design,
In His Garden of Faith, the Holy Spirit aligns.