Thursday, April 30, 2015


Reflections on the Sixth Week of Spring

 

How many memorial plantings have you made?” Mom asked over the phone. She'd been looking at photos of mini daffodils I'd planted for my sister-in-law's mother. The question made me curious to see if the marsh marigolds I'd planted for Aunt Jane, who was the last entry of my “In Memory” book, were blooming. I walked through the grass awash with violets and spring beauties then into the woods decorated by trout lilies. By a woods pond, Aunt Jane's marsh marigold had vibrant leaves but no buds. Had the cold winter or critters nipped them back? I continued downhill. Bluebells and spring cress flowered near Deer Creek. All the wildflowers on Wells Wood were tributes to Spence's parents, homestead founders and guides for many a wildflower walk. I circled up to catchment basin that slowed road runoff's travel through the south yard. In the trickles, Aunt Jane's second marsh marigold flourished–lots of buds and an open flower. Smiling, I thought of special flowers. Forget-me-nots, black-eyed-Susans, lilies, daisies, asters, and more would follow. I'd made twenty-seven memorial plantings.

Sunday, April 26, 2015


Reflections on the Fifth Week of Spring

Sixty-two and thirty-seven, average temperatures for Wells Wood's fifth week of spring, didn't convey the surprises and variability for the time of year. Monday rain pounded. I wore boots for a muddy walk to cut daffodils. The sky cleared, and sunshine lit raindrops dangling from leaves. Willow branches swayed like lacy ribbons. Wisps of vapor grew into glowing white and dense gray cloud mounds. Rain misted then puddled the ground. Whistling wind brought back blue skies. The rain-sun cycle continued throughout the day. Cooling temperatures brought wet snow Thursday. Flakes covered pansy faces, daffodil cups, and downed logs. The snow wasn't surprising, but three other incidents that morning were. Ambling through the field, two bear cubs heard Spence in the kitchen and galloped into the woods. Spence, voted the-most-easy-going husband by my friends, asked me what I was going to wear for swim class. And, the Learning Center children, who'd waited so long for spring, didn't even mention the snow. Better at indicating the surprises and variability for the time of year were record temperatures–eighty-nine and nineteen.

 

Sunday, April 19, 2015


Reflections on the Fourth Week of Spring

Because soaking in chlorine made my hair feel like straw, I bought the only kind of swim cap Dunham's stocked–a flat, round piece of silicone. The newfangled thing puzzled me so I tried it on at home. I couldn't get it on my head let alone over my hair. The cap shot off like a charged rubber band or shrivelled into a bun. I donated it to the YMCA and ordered a “Luxury Diva” from Amazon. The textured black cap had a white strap, slipped on, and snuggled my temples. My ponytail created an air pocket which bounced my head during sidestroke. Since I had a new cap, I decided to retire my old black and white suit with its faded-to-gray belt, drooping skirt, and stretch-marked polyester. I sewed in extra elastic to tighten the top of my daughter's jaunty, but modest, two piece suit. Then I squeezed between two men in the middle section of the YMCA pool for a quarter mile swim before Deep Water Fitness. On breast stroke, the front of the suit dropped four inches off my chest, filled with water, and gave me the experience of swimming topless. Did the men notice? I didn't want to know. Men did notice Saturday, however, when I wore the new garden hat my sister gave me. As I cleared dried plant stems from the front yard, passing fishermen honked and waved.
 

Sunday, April 12, 2015


Reflections on the Third Week of Spring

 

Animals know it's spring. Searching for nesting spots, a robin and a phoebe checked the ends of house logs. A critter had nested in a hole under the deck. Not wanting an animal that close to his salad bed, Spence baited the Havahart trap with almond butter toast. Thursday morning a large female raccoon crouched in the cage. Hoping she'd stay in the area to eat yellow jackets, Spence hefted the cage into the tractor bucket and drove her to the flood plain. He opened the trap. She raced towards the creek and disappeared behind a sand mound. He rode back uphill and filled in the hole. But, Spence didn't dislodge Friday's visitor. At 5:30, noise on the deck woke him. He thought it might be the wind, but George's flicked back ears and at-attention fur convinced Spence to look. He turned on deck and porch lights. Nothing. He made coffee. The noise continued. Spence glanced out the sliding glass door. Behind the jade plant, a dark shadow rose. A bear standing on hind legs inspected the empty sunflower seed feeder. George crouched as low as cat-possible. Back on all fours, the bear sniffed the pile of seed shells. Then it padded to the porch, stepped over Spence's open umbrella, paced to the gate, and walked back to the deck. A half hour later, the bear left. In vain, George begged to go outside. We know bears wake up hungry in spring.

Sunday, April 5, 2015


Reflections on the Second Week of Spring

Since Groundhog Day, I've been waiting for the first spring flower. This week I searched for other signs of spring too. Robin songs woke me at 6:20. A dusting of morning snow melted quickly under blue skies. Sprouts made green fuzz on fall-seeded fields. Buzzards hovered. Shrubs blushed in red buds. The bottom step of the porch appeared from beneath snow. And, when I was driving carefully to avoid slipping into the deep runoff ditch by Hutch's house, a caravan shared the narrow road–escort car; white department of natural resources truck with five gallon buckets hanging on the sides; and eight trailing vehicles. The tag-along drivers were watching which hatchery fish were stocked under what bridges–a Deer Creek sign of spring. Desperate for a spring photo, I rode with Spence to our friends' farm. Dogs barked, Spence chatted with folks, and I pointed my camera at galvanized buckets on maple trees. Curious, I peeked under a metal top to see the spout. Drops of sap grew on the edge then pinged to the bottom. Aroma of manure covered any chance of discovering if sap had a fragrance. Later, we found the first daffodil buds. But fulfillment came Saturday evening. I sat in the middle of Creek Road next a neighbor's front bank and photographed snowdrops–the first spring flower.