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Author: Anne Cassidy

Just in Time

Just in Time

Spring arrives at 10:46 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. Today we’ll have more than 12 hours of daylight. It’s the vernal equinox, when I always think of Dad.

Today we’ll have more light than darkness, more warmth than cold. Today we’ll say goodbye to snowcrete and the Polar Vortex.

Just in time, I can stop wearing gloves, which I donned as recently as a few days ago. Just in time, I can turn my face to the sky (slathered with SPF 50, of course).

“Just in time” implies that I would explode or something if we had to endure more winter weather. And of course, I would not. I would put my head down and keep going.

Nevertheless, it’s been a long, cold winter. At times this season it’s seemed like winter would never end. But today, at least meteorologically, it has. And just in time.

The Redder the Better

The Redder the Better

We are flush with cardinals here in my corner of Virginia, but the male at the feeder yesterday was one of the most vibrant I’ve ever seen. He practically glowed.

I did a little research, and sure enough, male cardinals are at their most vivid in late winter and early spring. Diet determines color, and females want a partner with a seed stash. The redder, the better.

You might wonder how such an outlandishly bright bird manages to be one of the longest lived, up to 15 years old in some cases. Male cardinals certainly aren’t hiding from predators.

The answer, according to the Cornell Bird Lab, is that cardinals avoid the stress of migration, and staying put gives them a longer breeding season. They are “habitat generalists” who can nest in a variety of locations, and the females of the species are far less conspicuous than their mates. They camouflage themselves in tangled shrubs (of which we have plenty).

It’s easy to be ho-hum about cardinals, given how many we have. But their springtime brilliance reminds me how lucky we are to have them in our midst.

(I snapped this photo during a late-winter snowstorm several years ago. This fellow was already an eye-popping scarlet.)

The Piano’s Lesson

The Piano’s Lesson

My piano and I are simpatico. When I don’t play, it glowers; when I do, it shines.

Proof of our being in sync: I had no sooner stocked up on distilled water than I noticed the flashing light that tells me when the piano’s humidifier needs filling.

The piano has made me more aware of indoor humidity or lack thereof. Of outdoor humidity I need no reminders. I live in a region of high stickiness and temper my warm-weather activities accordingly.

But the dry air that keeps my tresses from frizzing is not good for my favorite instrument. The piano thrives in a moist environment. Which means I probably do, too.

Slipping in a Walk

Slipping in a Walk

Schools dismissed early. County courts closed. Yet the feared tornados did not arrive. A little after 7 p.m. I slipped outside for a post-dinner walk, making my way through the humid dusk.

The storm warning had ended and a high-wind warning had yet to begin. The jets were not yet flying low over the neighborhood. I could hear the owls hooting in the woods, could see the yellow glow of lamplight from houses across the street.

It felt like an achievement, getting outside on this wild weather day. It felt like I had accomplished something. The most elemental of all accomplishments — moving through space — but sometimes, that’s enough.

(No rainbow last night, but the day before St. Patty’s Day, you’d better believe I was looking for one.)

One Oscar After Another

One Oscar After Another

I title my post in homage to this year’s winner, even though I was hoping this year’s winner wouldn’t win.

I preferred “Hamnet” of the films I’d seen … but knew it wouldn’t prevail. I’m glad its leading lady took home an Oscar, though. To watch Jesse Buckley’s performance as Shakespeare’s wife, to see the emotions of love and grief and wonder pass across her face, was a master class in acting.

Which is not to say that “One Battle After Another” didn’t include some fine performances, too. It was the overall feel of the movie that left me cold.

But you do not come here for movie critiques, dear reader, so I will close by saying that the 98th Academy Awards presentation was brisker than many; it ended by 10:30 p.m. And since I have sat through the reception of countless Oscars after another (seldom skipping the program), I’m celebrating the pre-midnight close of the show as much as anything else.

Snow Flower

Snow Flower

The hellebore or lenten rose wasn’t on my gardening radar until a decade or so ago, but since then I’ve grown to admire this stalwart early bloomer. It’s so stalwart that it can get caught in a spring snow shower, which is exactly what happened to it — and me — yesterday.

I had run out to an early exercise class and morning full of errands, not paying much attention to the thickening rain as I jumped in the car. It had been 85 degrees the day before. Accumulating snow was not on my mind.

But accumulating snow is exactly what we received. Winter’s parting gift, I hope.

When I returned home, soaked and cold, I snapped this shot of the lenten rose, its creamy white blossoms nearly smothered by clumps of snow and ice.

The slushy precipitation had turned it into a completely different kind of plant. A snow flower: the epitome of March.

Close Enough?

Close Enough?

There was a family gathering recently, and as usual at family gatherings, barely controlled chaos. As we finished up the meal, a transgression came to light. A pair of five-year-olds had absconded with a pair of earrings. This meant they had gone upstairs and rummaged through a bedroom, another no-no.

There were the usual denials and deflections. He did it. No, she did it. Then a firm parental voice: “That is unacceptable behavior. Those earrings did not belong to you. This is not your house. Repeat that so I know you understand.”

A wee voice responded with scant contrition: “Those earrings aren’t mine.” Barely controlled smirks from the crowd.

“This isn’t my house,” said with more petulance than penitence. The crowd is now holding its collective breath, trying hard not to laugh.

Then the coup de grace. “Close enough,” said the five-year-old with a flounce of her pretty skirt.

That was it. The howls of glee could not be stilled. We began with stern and ended with silly. Were we close enough to hold the line on acceptable behavior? I hope so.

Swan Lake

Swan Lake

Yesterday brought freakish warmth. Welcome warmth, given the cold winter, but freakish just the same. Last week I was still debating if I could walk without gloves, and I began the stroll with hands balled up into my sleeves.

I trod counter-clockwise around the lake, spotting a fellow walker halfway around. She was craning her neck between houses to get a better view. She was quick to share her discovery.

“I’ve never seen swans on the lake before,” she said. “But I just did.” She showed me where to look, and there they were, vague dots of white on a smooth, glassy surface.

I snapped a shot, not just of the swans but of the place that held them: the green foliage thick with rain, a house in the distance, dark trunks fading to gray.

It was not just the swans but swans on the lake. It was that moment of that walk, captured in time.

She Kept A Diary

She Kept A Diary

I just finished reading The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon, historical fiction chronicling a winter in the life of Martha Ballard, the midwife of A Midwife’s Tale by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich.

I’ve had the latter on my shelf for years, though I haven’t read it. But The Frozen River pulled me in from the beginning. What struck me most about the novel was not how quickly I turned the pages, but how vividly the character of Martha was portrayed.

I didn’t realize until the author’s note at the end that Martha Ballard was the same 18th-century midwife that appeared in A Midwife’s Tale, and that all the diary entries in the novel are the ones penned by the real, historical Ballard. A woman we only know because she kept a diary.

As Ulrich writes, “Outside her own diary Martha has no history. No independent record of her work survives. It is her husband’s name, not hers, that appears in censuses, tax lists, and merchant accounts for her town…. Martha did not leave a farm, but a life, recorded patiently and consistently for 27 years.”

Here’s how the fictional Martha put it: “I cannot say why it is so important I make this daily record. Perhaps because I have been doing so for years on end? Or maybe—if I am being honest—it is because these markings of ink and paper will one day be the only proof that I have existed in this world. That I lived and breathed. That I loved a man and the many children he gave me. It is not that I want to be remembered, per se. I have done nothing remarkable. Not by the standards of history, at least. But I am here. And these words are the mark I will leave behind.”

As a diarist/journal-keeper for decades, I know just what she means. She kept a diary. And that made all the difference.

(A ledger from Williamsburg, Virginia, the same era as Ballard, but with numbers not words on the page.)

Season of Light

Season of Light

I seldom think of my body as a well-oiled machine, but the sleep disruption brought about by one hour of “springing head” makes me wonder. We were dodging bullets in a war, jumping in cars to avoid being hit. According to the dreamscape, I was in Afghanistan, but the Iran war must have been the trigger. That and the strange new evening light.

Hopeful that it’s just a one-night readjustment I turn to the more important matter at hand. Our time change Sunday ushers in the season of light. How often at the end of summer do I kick myself for not enjoying it more, not being out in it every minute I can.

Outside-after-dinner, I call it. I saw folks enjoying it last evening, neighbors on bikes or on foot, working in a walk after supper but surprised by the sudden darkness. Though it was light till 7:30, spring twilights aren’t as long as summer ones.

Every year this time I’m reluctant to leave my winter cocoon. Aside from shoveling snow, there are few outdoor tasks in January and February. But March brings back the gardening to-dos. It’s easy to feel overwhelmed.

Still, we’re on the move. We’ve rounded the corner. The sun is on our side. We are once again in the season of light.

(Miniature daffodils are already blooming in the front garden.)