cleothedog

Tag: seasonal

unabbreviated days: summer, baby

The following essay first appeared in my newsletter, salt air. Please support my writing and follow along by reading, subscribing, and sharing!


Hello all,

Before autumn is completely underway, I have some words to share about summer.

The last few months, and the last year plus, have been life-changing on my end, and a lot of work. At the beginning of summer I birthed our beautiful daughter, and around the autumnal equinox she is about three months old. A true summer baby. These months—of pregnancy, birth, recovery and postpartum, and taking care of a newborn—have been the hardest work I’ve ever done and the most joy!

Like I’ll keep repeating in this newsletter, I’m grateful for changing seasons. I’m not a 70-degrees-every-day-of-the-year kind of person. (Will climates like that even exist anymore? Do they?) In fact, my life has been heavily shaped, from childhood, on the changing of the seasons. With the turn from summer to fall being, possibly, my favorite shift, and fall my favorite season.

But something about the shift to autumn and winter in the last few years has gotten harder for me. I don’t know if it’s due to getting older, struggling more with these seasons’ effects on my mental state, living full-time in a climate with long, cold winters, or some combination of the above, but I may—dare I say it?—be becoming a summer person.

I’ve usually held an unpopular opinion: summer is not my favorite season. When I was a kid, I sort of said that it was—and to some degree that was true, because it was the time of year when I didn’t have to be in school (I liked that). It was also the time we were at the beach the most (then and now, I’m happiest at the beach any time of year). Weather-wise, however, summer was not and is not my favorite. Frankly, summer is too hot, and this is only increasingly so as the earth’s climate gets more and more untenable. The extreme heat of this summer, for example—which was ROUGH when newly postpartum, by the way—is not something I tolerate well.

I do love the long days though. There’s something about unabbreviated days that is soothing. And I love being able to step outside without bundling up or even putting shoes on first—it’s a very specific kind of freedom.

Giving birth and taking care of our baby has made this summer especially intense and beautiful. And the whole past year has been intense and beautiful. Pregnancy is not for the faint of heart, nor is birth, or parenting. It’s hard work! And it contains so much. It has been a journey so far and we’re still on it.

In the dark, cold days of winter I imagined what this summer would be like. When I went for walks in the freezing wind, holding my collar under my chin and avoiding slipping on ice, I thought about how the baby and I would go for walks in the warmth, pick blueberries and raspberries, spend time on the porch. I wasn’t thinking then about all the air quality warnings there’d be due to wildfire haze, keeping us inside on certain days, plus the intense heat waves. . . but even amidst those we have made the most of summer and admittedly I’m not quite ready for fall. Newborn haze and summer haze were one this year, and I’m so grateful.

Here, autumn is already apparent. Temperatures are cooling, some leaves have started turning—even as I insist on continuing to not wear socks. There’s that back-to-school, dry leaves smell. Acorns on the trail.

Maybe in the coming weeks autumn will make me fall in love with it again. But I’ll miss the summer—maybe this one more than any other I’ll experience, even with its many ups and downs, deep beauty and significant challenges. I think this over when I take walks in the evening, the sky highlighted pink and purple. It’s the bridge between summer and fall. What should we call this time?

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happy halloween 🎃

32

forget-me-nots, stone wall, shadow

spring

Things are a little slower on the mountain, but spring is arriving. It’s interesting, living in the woods and in a cabin, noticing quite early on the earliest signs of spring—a little more bird sound, especially at new times of day. Even then there’s still a lot of snow on the ground. It covers everything for a long time still, and you walk on it every day. We still make fires. Obviously on one day (daylights savings) the days get longer, the sun sets later. There is more light. The texture and consistency of the snow, both the snow on the ground and trees and the snow that keeps falling, a few more times, changes. There’s a little more warmth in the air, slightly. The days get even longer. 

You really start to notice it when the water starts flowing and the streams get fuller again, burbling, rushing. There are rivulets everywhere! Coltsfoot alongside them—the first-of-the-first flowers (spring ephemerals).

The robins and the mourning doves are back, thank goodness. They’re calling to each other. 

There were dark-eyed juncos everywhere, around the bottom of our bird feeders, which we stopped filling, so we have been seeing fewer nuthatches and woodpeckers, though they’re still out there and I hear them, and the chickadees have stayed out. Has their demeanor changed? 

We’ve been seeing butterflies again too. All other bugs are also out more again suddenly (they are not all welcome, to be frank). Now we’re making fewer fires. A lot of the spring bulbs are coming out. For a sudden warm bunch of days, we lightly re-mulched them with leaves. I just started hearing peepers and other frogs, I can even hear them from my window. 

The trees are starting to bud. They haven’t leafed yet. A couple of the crocuses have just flowered.

I got a taste of spring already in my hometown—bright hyacinth, daffodils waving their heads at me, forsythia and flowering trees. 

A string of unseasonably warm days is followed by a string of unseasonably cool days. Because that is the way of the weather in this state, compounded by the fact that climate change makes weather patterns and seasonal transitions more erratic. 

The daffodils, tulips, and beginning of the lilies and irises are still pushing up slowly but it’s rainy and cloudy. We’re making fires again, at least for part of the day. When it’s cool I don’t hear the peepers or other frogs.

More spring ephemerals start popping up or are close—trout lilies, trillium, others I don’t know the names of yet. There are ramps in the woods. Things are getting greener, the grass, the evergreen needles. Fiddleheads are popping up, very pale green and fuzzy. 

Then daffodils are finally opening here. Our first beautiful one weathered all the rain. The little ones are popping up like fairies.

It’s misty and cold here in the mornings, and then it burns off. We have some partial sun some days. 

The birds are singing to each other. It’s not quite warm yet. But it’s coming. 

More trees are budding, but they are going slowly; they haven’t fully leafed yet. The ash tree still hasn’t even started to bud.

We have some dry days. Some of the smaller channels of water and the huge puddles dry up. Then on wet days the channels flow again. Now we’re getting tons of rain and everything is sopping again.  

Then some sunny days. More spring bulbs and other greening. Tulips are close. The trees are a symphony of different buds—different heights, colors, textures, shapes, and far along-ness. 

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Apple crisp and other fall things:

Maple scones and winter celebrations:

See you in 2022!