TRIUMPH OF SPIRIT IN LOVE, NATURE & ART

Posts tagged “Spring

The Panoply of Spring


Muskrat swimming

Spring Peepers peeping

Red-winged Blackbird joining the Peeper Chorus


“The Rites of Spring”


 Sap a flowin’

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 Ice a goin’

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Frogs a croakin’

P1130043_edited-1Turtles snorin’


Denizens of the Deep


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The marsh is melting

and

all the turtles in their hibernacula

deep down under the melting ice

will soon emerge

and the marsh will sing

the chorus of the Spring Peeper

and the salamanders will emerge

with the urge to murge

and joy and the life force

will fill the air

and lift the fog

enveloping my soul.

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Photons of Golden Light


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Photons of gold

the tail end of winter’s light

up close

and far away

the tail end of the light of day

bright yet almost night

wafting with whispers

of a new season

a new reason

to live.


Joie de Vivre


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No words needed

for unadulterated joy


Dinosaurs


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As Spring competes with Fall

for foliage

tree trunk dinosaurs

roam

the spotted green

tusset grass in the marsh.


The Infinity of Spring


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Light embraces each flower

encasing it in color

energizing each blade of grass,

an infinity of green,

creating the world we see,

the dream screen

photons of energy

we drink with our eyes,

as our total being,

like the infinity of blossoms,

is caressed by the Light.


Springtime Blues no.3


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I am tres desolee

today

spring blossoms

morph to snow

when drained of color

against a grey sky

as I morph to lows

after a false high


Springtime Blues


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“It’s Spring and a man’s fancy turns to love…

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I can’t hold this pose forever.  Where the blazes is that woman anyhow?”


The Dance of the Croci


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Whirling dervishes

of Croci

spinning colors

of violet and orange and green

soporific breezes

 brushing the sunlit

freshness of air

dizzying sway of seeds

dropping from trees

my head reels

drunk with the nectar

of Spring

 


Fragile Croci


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Oh, brave town crier of Spring

bursting forth before all others

in the cold

you age

as I watch

wrinkles in your petals

still beauteous with inner glow

as you close your countenance

against the chill wind


Blossoms of Heartbreak


Teardrops/raindrops

upon the nascent leaves

of spring weeds in the marsh

a chance april shower

the brimming overflow

falling from red, watery eyes

007

 Dreadful is death

most of all in spring

our Dearest dying amid booming, blooming life

and Spring sprinkling

blossoms of heartbreak

on our final goodbye.


Through the Green Lightly…


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through the pale veil of green

the tusset grasses grow

as the greening of the marsh

intensifies each longer day

while below frogs

and turtles

and fairy shrimp

dance their rite of spring

prey for the ducks,

crows, bald eagles,

  ephemeral lives

 we watch

nature raw

unawares

of the fragility

of us


Looking for the Light


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In the golden hour

Spring sprouting trees

dainty with bud,

a delicate delight

devoured

by the hungry devotee.


Violet Reflections


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Today the sky reflects violet on the marsh

as statues stand shrouded purple in Catholic Churches.

Today my eyes weep blue tears, mirroring the sky,

at the slights, the fights, the cruelty of human nature.

Mine but pinpricks by comparison

to the persecution, execution and death

of innocents, of earth, of nature

and of He who was known as Jesus.


A Resurrection


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“Washed out” colors soon will be scintillating

and bare branches budding

with brown bush breaking out in full flowering regalia.


Mid-March Reflections


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What is referred to as the “washed-out” landscape

of March

is brimming with the glow of secret growth

about to burgeon forth

into a verdant folly of spring green.


“Landscape of Loss”


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Sap is flowing through ice and snow

When nature awakens in late March or early April, sap starts flowing in the trees and ice changes to water marking the end of hibernation.  This is the grand opening of the wetlands and the pilgrimage to the vernal pools as David M. Carroll writes in his “Swampwalker’s Journal: a Wetlands Year.”  A vernal pool is a body of water which fills up in autumn and winter and is swollen in the spring but often dries up completely by the end of the summer.  Carroll describes vernal pools so beautifully: “It is at snowmelt and ice-out, the last sleets, first rains, and the earliest warming breaths of spring that they beckon wood frogs, salamanders, and spring peepers from surrounding upland woods, where they have passed the winter in rotted-out trees roots [a reason not to ‘clean up’ the woods], under layers of bark and litter, in small mammal tunnels and other hibernacula in the earth.”  The melting snow heralds the march of the amphibians.  “Vernal pool habitats hold a galaxy of small things that come to life the instant ice and snow turn back into water.”

Carroll walks the swamps, as the title of his book suggests, in search of mating salamanders and spotted turtles, bogs, fens and all wetland flora and fauna.   He tells us that there must be a certain collusion of events– several warm days in a row followed by a darkest of nights with temperatures ideally in the mid-50s with rain preferably two nights in a row.  And then the magical migration begins.  The salamanders begin their “annual pilgrimage” to the vernal pond to mate.

My husband and I are lucky enough to have a vernal pond on the property next door to us and when Spring comes the sound at night from that pond makes us feel as if we are camping out next to a vast wetland.  The music of the spring peepers plays through the night throughout the house, often starting overeagerly in the late afternoon.  This manic symphony thrills us every year.  It is the first sign of Spring for us.  The quality of joyousness and the affirmation of life gladdens our souls.  Going to sleep with that sound makes us remember what we so often forget, to give thanks to our Creator for His magnificent creatures.

Inspired by Carroll, one year we awaited the first dark, rainy warm night after a succession of warm days.  In our rain gear, armed with flashlights we set out around 11PM to look for the march of the salamanders.  We walked to the nearby pond.  Nothing.  We walked quite aways down a nearby dirt road that has run off but is not quite a vernal pond.  We shone the flashlight this way and that.  Nothing.  We finally headed home disappointed and dejected and my husband started towards the front door when I let out a yelp.  There in the doorway was a 6 inch spotted salamander in all its glory!  We never found the march of the salamanders but we were greeted by one of these fantastic amphibians right at our front door!

This story, however, does not have a happy ending.  In his epilogue to the “Swampwalker’s Journal,” David Carroll explains why it took him more than 7 years to complete this book.  He writes that he became involved in saving some of the wetlands in his book and says sadly nearly all of his interventions have or will become “losing battles.”  He describes the plight of the wetlands, bogs and fens as a “landscape of loss.”   And he scorns our human selfishness as he writes how it “reveals explicitly the extent to which we think of ourselves as owning all living things, along with the very earth, air, and water in which they live, as if we possessed some divinely mandated dominion over all creation.”  He warns: “As we will learn in time none of this belongs to us.”  I read these words, knowing them to be true and I think of the soon-to-be-extinct bog turtle and other creatures with the same possible fate.  I think of the spotted salamander who came to our door, as did Shelley, the snapping turtle who used to return to our drive way every year to lay her eggs.  I think of the spring peepers whose joyous song heralds spring next door every year, and I fear for the future of them all.


Ducks in the Morning, Ducks in the Evening…


Thought Moonside could use a little levity on this Vernal Equinox Eve with Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in their Art Gallery comedy Skit that features ducks.  Ducks have now returned to theDSCN2431 copy

the few ponds and lakes that have defrosted, gathering in large groups.  I caught one lone duck apart from the rest– perhaps an Asperger’s duck (I think I can say that being Aspie myself with an Aspie husband).  Enjoy the clip on ducks from the skit in the video below.


Fleeting Filigree


Moonrise through Filigree Trees

Winter is dying

and dead trees

are coming to life.

Your sap is starting to flow

bringing  forth birthing buds

of spring as

people clammer

for the greenery of summer.

But I love you most

when you are naked, nude, and vulnerable,

stripped bare of  beautiful-to-be sure

spring/summer finery.

I mourn your fleeting filigree

on this snow-showery day

of  comforting gloom and grey

and feel kinship with you

as you stand staunch against the cold

and stark against the feathery flakes of white.

I think you  most beautiful

in your bare-arm-intricacy,

and lace-like, linear patterns

drawn against a back-drop of sky,

as you reach for the Almighty.


Diamonds in the Marsh


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Scintillating snow melts

and fills a pre-Spring marsh

full of sparkling jewels

where bedazzled frogs

 soon will hide.