Tuesday, September 13, 2022

September “Summer” #phenology

We are enjoying the gift of another beautiful late summer, early autumn day. I noticed the female and/or juvenile ruby-throated hummingbirds are still around. It’s been weeks since we’ve seen a male. A day or so ago I saw a small dragonfly along the road’s edge. Still no sightings of woolly bear caterpillars. For nimrods, ruffed grouse season opens Saturday when it’s forecast to be thunderstormy and 80℉. That’s not the kind of weather I’d enjoy hunting grouse in.

Northern Minnesota ruffed grouse
Northern Minnesota ruffed grouse
Photo by J. Harrington

The asters and mums we planted are settling in nicely and brightening the place even more. Thursday or Friday we’ll collect the first box of our Community Supported Agriculture [CSA] autumn share. This morning I managed to dig up about half the bed where the Better Half wants to plant peonies. With luck, I’ll finish digging tomorrow and then work in a summer’s worth of compost.

It is hard to believe that we’re almost halfway through September, but I’ve noticed that I’m getting back into a baking-bread-more-frequently routine. That corresponds with fewer salads and more warm dinners showing up in the household supper/dinner menu. We’re not quite back to the soups and stews season, but I think I can see it from here unless, of course, the weather becomes as messed up as the stock market is these days. Admittedly, the stock market isn’t the economy, but it appears the Fed’s determination to put a stake through the heart of inflation may lead to an example of “the operation was a success, but the patient died” condition.


And Now It’s September,


and the garden diminishes: cucumber leaves rumpled
and rusty, zucchini felled by borers, tomatoes sparse
on the vines. But out in the perennial beds, there’s one last
blast of color: ignitions of goldenrod, flamboyant 
asters, spiraling mums, all those flashy spikes waving
in the wind, conducting summer’s final notes.
The ornamental grasses have gone to seed, haloed
in the last light. Nights grow chilly, but the days
are still warm; I wear the sun like a shawl on my neck
and arms. Hundreds of blackbirds ribbon in, settle
in the trees, so many black leaves, then, just as suddenly,
they’re gone. This is autumn’s great Departure Gate,
and everyone, boarding passes in hand, waits
patiently in a long, long line.


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Please be kind to each other while you can.

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