Thursday, April 17, 2008

Achieving liftoff

Yesterday was it--the day Spring became a reality instead of a theoretical possibility. Everyone has their own gauge. For some it's the first robin, but as far as I'm concerned, the early bird gets frostbite. For some it's the first snowdrops--but they get ahead of themselves, too. I look for the first sunny day in the 60s, and the first blue heron. Yesterday--double whammy.

If the heron has come back, you know it wasn't some flighty decision--they can, after all, barely fly. They seem to be a "proof of concept" design on the part of nature, rather than an actual production model. Watching them lumber up from the shallows is like watching a grainy newsreel of Wilbur and Orville at Kitty Hawk. They graze the water with each downbeat, like a seaplane powered by oars. Both the principles of lift and the grace of God appear to be necessary to accomplish launch.

Just so my spirits. The blue body of winter is almost too massive for my wingspan to support. But give me sufficient open water, a little solar power assist, and up I go--eventually.

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Thursday, March 20, 2008

All things being equal

Day and night have come back into balance, as they do twice each year, but no one who has spent a winter in the North Country actually expects spring to begin just because the calendar says so. Still, each new inch that falls after the equinox is a cause for special grievance, particularly when the winter has lived up to the tall tales we like to tell new residents. I'd been keeping an eye on the massive overhang of ice that shadowed the north side of the living room, and sure enough, it let go yesterday, taking out a second storm window. I lost the first when trying to preempt the fall by whacking the build-up loose with a steel pipe. All things being equal, this time I just moved the easy chair a little farther into the room away from ground zero. I'd hate to be decapitated while watching The Daily Show.

What can you do except tough it out? I've never known prayer to make the lilacs bloom one day sooner. The extra light helps a little, but raises expectations doomed to be dashed. There are strawberries in the store, but they are no sweeter (nor softer) than turnips. All things being equal, I'll stick to preserves until the local crop is in. I can already taste it on the tongue of my brain. Spring hopes eternal.

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