Spring,
Sprang, soon to be Sprung
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Please don’t
grimace like that, Mrs. Hunter. I’m drunk on spring love and language is ours
to play games.
Spring
arrives quickly here in Jalisco, the Garden State of Mexico. I declare, we are
definitely in the Sprang stage of Spring. Boing. Boing. Boing. What fun it is.
Light opens
the sky a little bit earlier. Not much, here closer to the Equator, but a little.
And it stays around a little bit longer in the evening before it drops behind
the mountains. And the day warms up sooner, stays warm longer. Ah, Spring.
Yesterday
while talking with my neighbor Janet, we saw a Crimson Collared Tanager. I
looked it up in my handy bird book. We have a vast variety of tanagers and this
type is a new-comer in the neighborhood.
Three days
ago I saw a butterfly I’d not seen before. It was the deepest, brightest, most
pure yellow, large, not as large as a bed-sheet butterfly, but larger than the
more common yellow butterflies that are always with us.
This morning
I came nose to nose with a dragonfly on my clothesline. She had the sweetest
face, like a miniature ET. We stared at each other for an actual two minutes,
nose to nose, and she showered me with love. Allow me my notions, illusions,
delusions, please. Spring is Sprang. Love is Sprung in the air.
For the last
two weeks I’ve been eating zucchini and/or squash blossoms every day from my
own garden buckets. By the weekend, I’ll be eating my own tomatoes. Tomatillos,
kissing cousins to tomatoes, already are hanging lovely green Japanese lanterns
on every vine. The larger ones are filling out nicely.
I miss my
lettuce salads but I had such a good crop, fed me and my neighbors for months,
so I let it go to seed. In a week or thereabout, I’ll be able to replant the
baby bathtubs, the containers I use for lettuce beds. Lettuce does not require
depth.
Janet’s
Jacaranda tree, always the first of this tree to show color, is bursting with
purple blooms. Mine is still shedding leaves like rain. The trees seem to have
jumped the season by a month. But I assume they know their schedule better than
I do. Lani’s tree will turn purple next. Then mine. John’s tree is last. The
strange things I notice.
Seasons seem
so different here, to me. Spring springs sudden out of winter, admittedly a
mild season, morphs very quickly into Summer, which I’ll call mid-March to mid-June.
The next season is the Rainy, through into October. October and November are
autumn. Then December and January round out winter.
Birds are
building new nests or repairing winter damage on the old homestead. They have
absolutely no morals, billing and cooing shamelessly, especially the partridge
doves who act like love birds year-round but go nuts in spring.
I have to be
careful when picking zucchini, gathering , pruning or tending flowers of any
kind, including tomato blossoms. Bees. Oh, the bees. They are, oh, well, busy
as . . . bees. They live their own cliché. Gathering honey. Carrying pollen.
Making sure life goes onward, sweetly.
I just
returned from my evening walk with Lola. This week a huge bull has moved into
the field with the horses, a temporary pasture he uses during Mardi Gras. This
animal is huge with great horns and giant lop ears. I know it is Spring. The
bull was leaning over the fence, licking the small horse’s face with his great
larruping tongue.
The horse
would move her head forward for a lick, then back. Then forward, then back. A
dance. Love is strange.
Me, I’m
having a heart attack, falling in love all over again, with everything I see.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
Plowing
through February
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