With the possible exception of questioning if we’ll enjoy enough snow cover for a white Christmas, the arrival of real spring stresses what little patience I have more than any other seasonal change. I don’t recall every getting antsy about when the leaf color will appear in autumn, but I do begin to wonder about when we’ll get leaf-out (usually around early May). Once the ice is off local trout streams, I wear insulated waders until water temperatures climb enough to make light-weight waders or wet wading comfortable. No big deal. I don’t even get too concerned about ice out on our local lakes and, since I’m not really an ice angler, I never care about when the ice will be thick enough to walk on.
some “Springs" mid-April looks like this
Photo by J. Harrington
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Now, if you’re feeling brave, ask me how much I want the ice off our driveway and the snow gone from our yard. I’ll give you an earful. It’s possible, now that I’m learning about no mow May and leaving dead leaves in place until we start mowing, rather than “tidying” the yard as soon as the soil dries and grass turns green, I’lll have to repress old habits and urges but it will be worth it to be able to get out and walk around with the dogs without having to break trail.
I suspect that growing up on the Atlantic coast, literally within ten miles or so of the ocean, has me biased against the kinds of winters we get in the North Country. I became imprinted on winters that were neither as long nor as deep as those we get here. The fact that we may get a couple of inches of snow this week and another inch and a half next week and, in between, may see our first 50℉ high since some time months ago doesn’t help. It feels as if Mother Nature keeps teasing us with a promise of spring only to snatch it away and say “Not yet!!” That kind of inconsistency is maddening, in both (all?) senses of the word.
Spring Snow
A kind of counter-blossoming, diversionary,doomed, and likethe needle with its dropof blood a littletoo transparently inlove with doom, takesissue with the season: Not(the serviceberry brightwith explanation) not(the redbud unspoolingits silks) I know I've readthe book but not (the lilac,the larch) quite yet, I stillhave one more card toplay. Beholda six-hour wonder: sixnew inches bedecking therailing, the bench, the topof the circular table likea risen cake. The saplingsmade (who little thoughtwhat beauty weighs) to bowbefore their elders.The moment bears morethan the usual signs of its owndemise, but isn't thatthe bravery? Builton nothing but the self-same knots of airand ice. Alreadythe lip of it riddledwith flaws, a sortof vascular lesion thatbetokens—what? betokensthe gathering returnto elementals. (Shewas frightenedfor a minute, who hadplanned to be so calm.)A dripline scoringthe edge of the walk.The cotton batting blownagainst the screen begunto pill and molt. (Whoclothed them out ofmercy in the skinsof beasts.) And evenas the last of thelightness continuesto fall, the seepageunderneath has gainedmomentum. (So thatthere must have been adeath beforethe death we call thefirst or what becameof them, the oneswhose skins were taken.)Now the more-of-casting-backward-than-of-forward part, which musthave happened while I wasn'tlooking or was lookingat the skinning knives. I thinkI'll call this mercy too.
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