
In the Sping of 2016, my mom divided a bunch of the hostas she had planted in her little condo-garden and gave them to me to transplant in my own garden. The hostas struggled that season . . . as newly transplanted hostas do . . . but I had every confidence that they would come back strong the next year. I knew my mom’s hostas would thrive in my garden.
What I didn’t know . . . is that my mom would die that very fall.
The next March – very near my birthday, I was looking out my kitchen window at my still-hibernating garden and I noticed . . . a random little red flower. All by itself. In the middle of . . . not really much else. I went out to investigate . . . and discovered a lonely little red tulip. That I never planted. It looked strangely like some little red tulips my mom had had in her garden — an early blooming variety.
And then it dawned on me. One of her little tulip bulbs had tagged along in one of her hostas!
And then I fell apart.
Because I was really struggling with my birthday that year — the first without my mom. And, suddenly, she was there. In my garden. Sending me hope and joy and birthday wishes.
These little tulips are not the beautiful, cultured variety most of us are used to seeing these days. They are small, clumping, naturalizing tulips that come back every year (most cultured tulips do not). They “self-seed” (“self-bulb?“) and will clump up and spread slowly over the years . . . if you let them. My mom loved tulips. We always had some in our garden when I was a little girl . . . so she was a perfect match for her adopted city of Holland, where it’s almost legally mandated that all residents plant tulips in their gardens. (That is not true, by the way; I am being facetious.) (But there are tulips everywhere in Holland). My mom had a variety of tulips planted throughout her little garden borders – but her favorites were those little red early-blooming tulips. Such joy in a winter-weary garden!

(She loved volunteering at the Tulip Time information booth each year. Here’s a picture of her – she’s on the left – with a pal in their full Tulip Time regalia.) (I sewed her costume, by the way.)
Anyway. Right on cue, and just around my birthday last week, my mom came to wish me a happy birthday again this year . . . in the form of little red tulips.
There are two good-sized clumps of my mom’s tulips in my garden now. They bring me immense joy . . . and sadness at the same time.
Hope always shows up in a garden.
(It really does.)
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If you want to learn more about “naturalizing” tulips/perennial tulips, here’s a little article.
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You may notice that I haven’t offered a Happy Hour for the last couple of weeks. (Or . . . maybe you haven’t.) Sometimes, blogging ideas run their course, y’know? Fewer readers were stopping by to share their joys, so I decided to retire the concept for the time being. Maybe I’ll bring it back once in a while, but I’m hoping that you’ll continue the practice of noting your joys . . . for yourselves . . . anyway.

Your tulips are lovely indeed, and it is wonderful that they bloom right around your birthday. Whenever I see a ladybug in my kitchen, I talk to it quietly as I know it’s my mom stopping by for a visit.
What a lovely way to be reminded of your mother’s love every year, Kym. Nature does give us hope in so many ways. I had not heard of naturalizing tulips! I will have to look into that. Happy birthday and have a nice weekend.
Oh Kym, this made me tear up. What a lovely surprise and a beautiful way for your mother to show up for you. (And I thought that was you in the photo at first. You look a lot like her!)
I also did not know about naturalizing tulips! I am so intrigued! (if the deer did not love them so much in my neck of the woods, I’d plant some… sigh) May your day continue to have little bits of home tucked away for you to find! XO
What a sweet little gift from you Mom. My grandfather also loved little red tulips. Now I wonder if his were the naturalizing kind – not that it matters. Hope does show up in our gardens.
I love this little red wtulips, too. And it was my grandma who planted them (and me!). Planting tulips skipped a generation in our family. (But it was my Mom who taught me to knit.). You two must not have been too far from Holland, Michigan, right? Which may have been the influence for your area’s Tulip Time? Our family loved our visit there so long ago. Sorry that Happy Hour is ending. Loved reading everyone’s comments
Those red tulips are a wonderful and lasting gift from your mom and they sure have perfect timing. My mom really only planted annuals AND YET she was the one who encouraged me to grow perennials when I got my first home. I moved as much of my garden as I could when I left that house and married Dale and even though those plants weren’t FROM my mom, I still feel that connection to her when they come back every year. Oof, losing a mom is rough, isn’t it? I have missed your Happy Hour posts but I get it – no blogger wants to be trapped into having to do the same theme week after week if it feels stale.
What a touching story, Kym. Thanks for taking the time to share it. Those red tulips look so cheery!
You taught me something new today. I didn’t realize there was such a flower as the “naturalized tulip”. They could work well here in the Village. How wonderful they show up every year to send you a B-day greeting from your mother. That’s a lovely remembrance, Kym.
I love that this little tulip is literally a gift from your mom, and was just waiting for spring. Hugs.
That red tulip is such a lovely and wondrous gift. Lucky you!