Billowy clouds in shades from crisp-white to soft-grey skipped across the blue sky in an effort to keep up with the finicky breeze. Dressed in their finest cotton-candy outfits, the clouds greeted the newborn Fall and kept the moonflower blossoms well protected under dappled sunlight through the late afternoon. All the while, the unseen fairies flitted in and out of the vine, for they were just getting started.
Moonflowers claim their name because they appear in the late afternoon, showing off their full, round figures, so similar to the full moon and yet, possessing their own beauty. They stay open, dancing the night away through the misty dawn before they fold up their petal skirts, leaving the sunlight to their cousins, the Morning Glories, who while away the quickening days. Each moonflower blooms only once yet, their brilliance requires nothing more than their own radiance to glow in the garden. Again, so much like their mentor, the full moon on a clear black night.
So, caught up in all of their enchanting revelry, I took their pictures by the light of their own silvery-ness and, they smiled back at me in all of their grandeur, basking in the glow of the cool autumn evening and bidding farewell to the long, hot summer.
Oh, those heart-shaped leaves!♥
ReplyDeleteWhen I hear "moonflower" I am reminded of one of the "Land Before Time" videos, where they needed the moonflower to heal the sickness that afflicted one of the grandfather dinosaurs. So of course I couldn't help but smile at this post. :)
We've had some yellow moons hanging low in the sky here, thanks to smoke from the fires in the central part of the state. Your brilliant white moonflowers are beautiful.