Summer Solstice
June 21, 2010
I just came in from a series of errands, involving several shadeless parking lots, as the mercury climbed like an express elevator. It is hot, very, appropriate, I suppose, for the first day of Summer.
Tomorrow Earth will begin its imperceptible swing back on its elliptical north-south axis, withdrawing the Northern Hemisphere from its closest annual proximity to Sol. The heat will continue to build for a month or two. Then slight stirrings of relief in gradually cooler temperatures.
I enjoy all the different seasons, but more often wish Summer over than any other season. Hot, buggy and a great provoker of allergies, that is Summer for me.
Bring on October (the first time this year I have sounded that old refrain.)
In Praise of Seasonable Weather
October 20, 2009
All things on earth point home in old October; sailors to sea, travellers to walls and fences, hunters to field and hollow and the long voice of the hounds, the lover to the love he has forsaken.
- Thomas Wolfe
Changes are coming fast, thermometer readings flirting with thirtyish lows, skies shading into deep blue, and nearly cloudless; green chased from tree leaves, freeing up yellows and reds in all their varying shades. Since the perpetual clouds lifted going into the weekend, October weather has shown up at last, just in time for the last half of the month. Since late in June, I have been muttering, grumbling and occasionally shouting, “Bring on October!” I am happy now.
Not so happy is my Beloved Babs, who commences to shiver when the temperature drops below eighty, and begs for a fire crackling on the hearth when the sixties show up. Saturday morning she was cocooned in multiple blankets, wrapped around her three-sweater bundled form. From deep within the piled on fabric, a muffled cry sounded, “I’m freezing!” We had our first fire Saturday night, smoking up the house and making the sweat pop on my forehead. Babs reclined on the couch opposite the fireplace, wrapped in coats, sweaters and a faux sheepskin cloak.
It may be a long winter. I hope so, but not too loudly – that mound of clothing on the couch might burst like the casing of a chrysalis, revealing a fierce little flame lover, who would heave more logs, stray pieces of furniture and the entire Sunday New York Times into the fire to combat those icy sub-sixty temperatures.
Summer 1954 Baltimore
July 15, 2009
The last posting for my grandfather the Colonel before his retirement post was in Baltimore. Coming home from Korea, he was put in charge of the records center for all enemy POWs at Fort Holabird. We journeyed north from Chattanooga to spend the summer in the row house my grandparents had found in Baltimore, some distance from the post. Out behind the house was a garden with corn, peppers and beans. We children were put to bed upstairs at our usual bedtime, which at the Baltimore latitude in Daylight Savings Time meant before sunset. We protested. It did no good.
Long days to the Solstice
June 21, 2009
Today is the longest day of the year, when the northern hemisphere is tipped as far towards the sun as it will be until next June 21. The slow counter-rotation leading to the winter solstice begins tomorrow. Today has been brutally hot, so appropriate to the first day of summer in the South.
We have had a whole week of long days, one cat sick and at the vet’s twice, dying the second day, and another escaping Barbara’s grip as we were loading all the remaining animals into the vet’s office for shots. No sign of Chelsea the Fugitive (from what? three squares, shelter from the weather and hostile animals?) We have posted notices around the neighborhood.
It is a long time until October.
Easing Summer’s Grip
August 8, 2008
During the hottest part of Summer, generally from early July on through mid-August, the “dog days” bear down with heat and haze, making me wish for October. Summer is sweat, bugs and heat rash for me. Overnight, a cool front dropped the morning temperatures, only eight degrees or so, but combined with a lower humidity and a cleansing of the particulate-heavy air, walking the dog this morning was pleasurable, instead of oppressively hot and sweaty.
The term “dog days” refers to the ascendancy of the star Sirius, known as the Dog Star to the Greeks and Romans. Depending on the latitude at which you live, Sirius sinks below the horizon for another year somewhere in mid-August to early September. So perhaps Sirius is taking some of the heat with it in the next week or so. Whatever the cause, I am grateful. I know that plenty of heat remains in the weeks ahead, but it is nice to have a little taste of what may come soon.
I notice also the beginning leaf fall of some trees in my neighborhood. Not the big trees, but some of the smaller ones, have contributed skimpy drifts of dry leaves to cover walks and driveways, and the edges of roadways. Very few so far, perhaps the early fall of leaves has more to do with the continuing drought than with seasonal rhythms. The cicadas still scream all day and night, and even today the high will be past the mid-point of the eighties, but hope is stirring in my cold blood, remembering in the buried genes of fjord dwellers and dark northern forest hunters the crisp and bracing days of Autumn.
Let it come.
Summer Nights
July 24, 2008
Another July has rolled around, with heat, humidity and memories of summers past. I have written here of the sounds of summer, especially nights on the sleeping porch of my grandfather’s farm house, when the crescendo of cicadas around the house walled in my sisters and me, as we fell into sweaty sleep.
I was today reading the opening description by James Agee of another summer, this one in Knoxville in 1915. The passage describes the neighborhood in which he grew up, and the summer evenings after supper when fathers watered their lawns with garden hoses, while their wives and children sat on the front porches, trying to stay cool. The passage is the prologue or introduction to Agee’s posthumous novel, A Death in the Family, an autobiographical account of the death of his father. Left in disorganized form, the novel was shaped into its present form by Agee’s editor. The description of summer 1915 in Knoxville was placed as a prologue because it seemed to fit nowhere else. Reading it, I realized that summer nights in the south were never more minutely or eloquently described before or since.
The sound of the cicadas (Agee calls them “locusts”) I will quote here:
The noise of the locust is dry, and it seems not to be rasped or vibrated but urged from him as if through a small orifice by a breath that can never give out. Also, there is never one locust but an illusion of at least a thousand. The noise of each locust is pitched in some classic locust range out of which none of them varies more than two full tones: and yet you seem to hear each locust discrete from all the rest, and there is a long, slow, pulse in their noise, like the scarcely defined arch of a long and high set bridge. They are all around in every tree, so that the noise seems to come from nowhere and everywhere at once, from the whole shell heaven, shivering in your flesh and teasing your eardrums, the boldest of all the sounds of night.
Wonderful. That completely describes a summer concert of cicadas. James Agee could write.
Heat
September 3, 2007
We would all be dead without the heat of the Sun, of course. Life exists because the great solar furnace showers solar rain upon us. In moderation, of course, filtered by the magnetic shields of Earth, and the thick atmosphere.
Like the face of God, the Sun is not for our unprotected eyes or flesh. After several mild summers, last summer was prelude to the unrelenting heat of these past three months. This week has been relatively moderate in comparison, highs in the low 90s rather than high 90s and 100 plus. A year ago this past July, I posted a complacent reminiscence about the heat and howling cicadas of my youth, sleeping on a porch at my grandfather’s house in the country. I am mightily tired of both heat and cicadas this early September. Our high today was listed as 91° f. which was plenty hot for me. Bring on October. And hope that unseasonable heat does not pollute the colors and brisk air of that favorite month of mine.
I dismiss all arguments about Global Warming in this current furnace heat. Who knows? The trend for the past one hundred plus years is for generally higher temperatures year round, at least in the Northern Hemisphere. However the long term plays out, I am ready for cool temperatures. Please.
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