Moths and Moonflowers
Last week, my beloved B sent to me some seeds from her collection. She not only added greatly to our tomato selection, but also a variety of marigolds and an edible flower/bean called Scarlet Bees.
She also enclosed Moon Flower seeds that she'd gathered from her own gorgeous vines that she grows over the brick and iron wall of her city garden in downtown Baltimore.
Moon Flowers might be my favorite flower of all. A member of the nightshade family*, they have an enormous, pungent white blossom that unfurls after dark like a virgin on her wedding night - one time only - then closes back into a beautiful fractal spiral within which a fat pistachio shaped, hard-shelled seed will grow inside a sexy coffee colored pod.
The seeds are so hard, that in order for them to germinate, the cultivator must nick them - or as I like to think of it, give them a love bite.
What flower is more sensuous than this? I can't think of any.
Velvety, ghostly, voluptuous petals reek of desire. They require particularly well endowed moths like the Carolina Sphynx - one of the hummingbird species - noted not only for resembling the bird in size and shape, but also for it's extra long proboscis, the better to reach into the deep wells of their sweet nectar.
Oh my. Moon Flowers and Moths have it all over The Birds and the Bees. I move to change it.
XXKHT
A nice poem about Moon Flowers is here: Cold Tea Blues Moonflowers
The picture at left is jacked and edited from here:
Moon Flowers and Carolina Sphynx Moths
*Same as tomatoes, peppers, egglplant etc. but a different genus.





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