April was azalea season at Marylake. We have four different colors on display surrounding our back porch. On top of the columns are the violet impatiens I bought at the local Ace Hardware store to add some color to the Easter altar with the white lilies. They are recuperating from Easter week inside in this photo, but soon revived in the sunlight and began blooming again once the azaleas faded.
Whenever I visit my family out in California, I am always amazed by the bougainvillea everyone seems to have growing in their back yards. In the San Francisco bay area this hardy plant seems to bloom all year around. At Marylake it can’t take the winter. I kept this one alive from last years’ Easter and thought I had lost it in February when all the leaves fell off, but come spring it sprang back to life in the south window of my cell.
This last year a lightning storm took out my favorite Marylake tree. It was a hundred year old white oak that dominated the front view of the monastery. The stairs that lead up to the novitiate ended at a window with a spectacular view of this grand old tree. When the lightning bolt hit it, the tree exploded sending bark flying through the downstairs windows into our library. You can see it’s stump to the right of this photo under the purple Martin houses. The azaleas are happy it’s gone as they get more light now.
My final azalea shot is of the other side of the front of our monastery. Once that Redbud tree’s blossoms fade, the azaleas begin to bloom. Although I cleverly omitted it from these photographs, we have had scaffolding and equipment on the front porch this spring finishing off the point and tuck sealing of the stonework in the upper parts of our lakefront façade.
1 Comments:
These are beautiful photos, thank you for sharing! I grew up in East End and I've always found the Monastery grounds to be beautiful, particularly in Spring. I was wondering with whom I might speak to seek permission to shoot family photographs on the grounds?
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