Spring is a trick of the light – it should be, after all, since ultimately the shift of seasons is about angles and sun. At some point in March the light changes – a new “certain slant of light” and thus, spring is here. It will be a while most years before the green and the daffodils or even the spring peepers arrive in upstate NY, but in the meantime, the sky and the air and the angle of sun says spring.
Seed starting is in full swing now and I sometimes feel I spend far too many of my days elbow deep in potting soil – but the smell of moist compost is energizing as well. It is sometimes hard in February to feel the connection between pressing small seeds into soil and the ripe eggplants of August, but if you can’t feel it, you can still draw on ancestral memory to know it is there.
I’m behind of course – which is the nature of spring. The entire experience of springtime for me is “not yet…not yet…gack, hurry, we’re late!” Maybe it is because that’s how spring happens here – an aching incrementalism where it feels that it will never turn green, those last patches of snow will never melt, the flowers will never bloom – and then an all-at-onceness that happens far to fast and disappears. The spring workload flows the same way – a cold spell puts us back and then all of a sudden it all has to be done – the barn cleaned, the babies birthed, the eggs hatched, the seeds planted, the ground tended….
It wasn’t much of a winter here, so I anticipate things will burst upon us earlier than usual. Already the red-winged blackbirds and the geese are back. A predicted warm spell next week will likely awaken the peepers and send the apricots into bloom. That means the press of work is higher than average – gardeners are optimists and nothing will stop me from trying to plant everything too early.
Our first wintering over of the bees couldn’t have gone better (as I said, it wasn’t much of a winter) – the honey bees have been out foraging on warm days already. As I groomed an angora rabbit yesterday on an unsually warm day, several bees hovered consideringly nearby, trying to decide whether there was any hope of pollinating the unusual bunny flower.
Hens are brooding, ducks are grumpy that we’re messing with their nests (I don’t really need more ducks, and the eggs are fabulous in the baked goods we make for Purim), the first does are heavy with kids and everything is in a gestating sort of mood – including the world at large.
We moved the rabbits back out-of-doors yesterday, a morning-long project that was satisfying and messy – they wintered on our sun porch, and it is good to have them back out in the fresh air. The winter was so mild that we had a February litter (we don’t normally breed for the darkest part of winter), a cross of our Cinnamons and American Blues that produced 7 beautiful little black rabbits. More babies are anticipated momentarily in a slew of colors.
Eric’s semester break comes next week – as is often the case it in no way coincides with anyone else’s vacation, but it does come at a good time – so the cleaning of the barns will commence, and the making of new garden beds, manuring of the old and raking, levelling and other maintenence that really should have happened in autumn but didn’t. I’ll be watching carefully for signs that some of my more delicate perennials survived the flooding last fall and the non-winter. Paradoxically, the warmer winter in some ways may have been tougher on the plants with no snow cover to insulate them from extreme cold (on the rare occasions it actually got extremely cold) and because of the wide temperature fluctuations.
Yesterday we had a taste of spring – temperatures in the high sixties put us in t-shirts and sent the kids out splashing in the mud and racing around as they haven’t for months. The pale sun hit bare skin for the first time in months, the indoor games that have obsessed them were put away, and we went and admired the roaring creek and the tiny bits of green arising along the road. Today we’re back to winter again, temperature-wise and there are even a few lazy flakes of snow meandering down, but it won’t last. The light has shifted, and the sun is back, and lo, the winter is gone and past.
Sharon