Nature Observation 2 - Greens
The bush sat motionless in the silent night air. From afar, its greenish gray shade seemed to
evenly coat the outside of its structure. It was a blob of color raised slightly off the
ground, as if someone or something crouched and was frozen in position. The bush rested behind an area of grasses and
Asian jasmine sprawled across the ground.
The bush could almost resemble an assemblage of the Asian jasmine if the
Asian jasmine clumped together, grew taller, and retained a specific
shape. Surrounded by smaller plants, the
bush stood powerfully, and its dense leaves and branches allowed the viewer to
see only an inch into its interior.
On closer inspection, a spectrum of green color covered the
bush, not just the greenish gray I had seen previously. The distance at which I analyzed its
components created a range of different impressions. In fact, by looking independently from long-distance,
middle-distance, and up close, I might not recognize it as the same bush. At each level of decreasing depth, more
details materialized. Getting closer, I
saw details of its little leaves linked by woody stems the size of a toothpick.
Each leaf contributed to the broad shape and texture of the plant even though
each had personality of its own. The size of each leaf compared to an adult’s
thumb, branching out from the its stem into a broad array of green before
converging back into one point at the tip. On touching its point, I was
surprised to find the rigidity in the leaves structure. It felt strong enough
to poke through my shirt if I had brushed up too closely. This observation led
me to notice the waxy coating enclosing its structure. Certainly, this layer
provided protection against Texas’s punishing heat.
I broadened my viewing angle once again and noticed how the
bush was shaped. Squared corners and rectangular arrangement, it followed the
sidewalk adjacent to its position. The bush had been manicured to match its
environment. This led me to wonder if I
would recognize its species in the “wild.”
Thanks for posting, and thanks for taking a close look at the bush. This is exactly the kind of description I was hoping for.
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