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Month: June 2023

rain

rain

after a very wet spring, it’s been rainless for quite a while across minnesota. in april, my pond was overflowing, and now two months later, it’s halfway to empty. i let my lawn go for the month of may (no mow may) and mowed it on the 29th, and i haven’t touched it since, save a few spots where i needed to tame the thistle weeds. the parts of my lawn in full sun are very dry, brittle, and not green.

so when the forecast showed rain this weekend, i was happy yet hesitant, because i know how these normally go, especially with snow (9″! oh wait, 6″! oh wait, 3″? oh, well, you get .5″). then it rained thursday night, and friday it started to rain during the day, thundering and then starting a solid downpour.

i stood under my covered front entry and watched the rain run down my driveway and into the engineered watercourse that took it down to the pond. i watched the heavy rain overflow the gutters and start to spill over the edges. i listened to the rush of water from sky and hitting the ground. smiled as my plants got soaked with droplets.

it didn’t last very long, but it was something. and afterward, goldfinches swarmed the birdfeeder, which i’m still curious about.

after a humid break today (and a very sweaty run), there’s more rain to come tonight. i did yoga on the patio tonight, and i watched as a cloud meandered across the blue sky in the distance and listened to distant thunder, a harbinger of (good) things to come. i generally would like rain to show up during the week, or at least overnight, but at this point, i welcome rain at any time.

civil twilight

civil twilight

or, as you all know it, the gloaming.

so, after the sun sets, there are three types of twilight before we hit night (aka full dark, as stephen king would say).

night starts when the sun hits 18º below the horizon. astronomical twilight is at 12º and nautical twilight at 6º. for a brief etymological moment, nautical twilight is named such because sailors could see most stars with the naked eye AND the horizon is visible.

civil twilight is the time when the sun is within 6º of the horizon.

i sit on my patio as i write this blog, and the sun is just entering civil twilight. i can see a pale crescent of the new moon as it’s also heading toward the western horizon. this is a lovely time of day, and the gloaming is set to last until 9:40 tonight.

the air is finally starting to cool off, and in may, this is when the frogs would start croaking up a storm. alas, the frogs are done in their season, but the birds are still chirping and bugs buzzing around. the patio is still hot under my feet, but the grass is always cool. i like to sit outside until mars pops out, some stars on the eastern horizon start to glow, and my solar lights blink on reluctantly.

civil twilight means we can still see enough to do things even though the sun has set – this is also called the golden hour in photography. the best time of day to take photos. and the gloaming? it traces its etymological origins to germanic for glow, which makes me like the word even more.

so many names for this time of day/night, this moment where one bleeds into the other. the light into the dark. right now i can see a bit of the horizon where the blue turns to greenish turns to yellow turns to purple and pink, with streaks of clouds that glow. is it named such so that the nighttime remembers to return it to us? a handing off of one day into the dark and then hopefully back into the day?

woodchucks

woodchucks

(good thing I didn’t name this daily delights.)

we have a woodchuck. the first time i saw her, i didn’t know what kind of rodent she was. sort of non-descript, really. no flashy tail, no special ears, nothing to differentiate her nose or feet. but bigger than a chipmunk, that was for sure!

then nate sent me a text with a pic: we have a woodchuck!!! (aka groundhog)

she has tunneled a home under the shed.

we’ve named her petunia.

some days when i come home, petunia is gallumping across the driveway to dive in her hidey hole, after having dug around in the flower bed.

and i’ve caught her chomping away at the leftovers in the compost pile (good for you, petunia).

so when i came home one day and saw my vegetable garden in disarray, i was dismayed. would this be the end of petunia? do i need to google how to get rid of woodchucks? install a fence only to have her tunnel under?

not only was the garden in disarray, but my baby honeycrisp tree had the leader broken off, hanging by a thread. that night i had a dream that it completely got bent over and i cried in my dream. i didn’t know i had such attachment to the tree.

but the next morning nate looked at the tree and said, there’s no way that was petunia. that was a deer.

stupid deers. continue to be a menace.

so i put some deer repellant (and other garden eaters will stay away) around the garden, and i still have to attend to the tree, but for now, petunia remains in her cozy tunnel under the shed and occasionally gallumps across the driveway when i come out the door or drive in.

after all, says nate, woodchucks were here first.

everyday delights: wild irises

everyday delights: wild irises

tonight i was taking a walk–during walks i always listen to podcasts instead of music–and on a fluke i played the most recent “this american life”, which i haven’t listened to in probably years.

one of the guests was ross gay, who compiled a small book of essay-ettes called “the book of delights.” example: carrying a tomato seedling through an airport. this book has been on my to-read list ever since john green recommended it in one of his videos, and now: 1) i definitely want to grab the book and 2) i’ve found some inspiration to do some sort of blogging.

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in the springtime, it’s always a surprise to be on a drive or a walk and see a sudden burst of tall color in the ditches where wild irises have sprouted up. sometimes they’re the traditional blue or purple, and other times they’re dark red or yellow. i’ve seen more wild irises this spring than i have in several years past.

tonight i almost missed them, off the side of the road as the cattails and other ditch detritus were already reaching to their full heights, as the sun was slanting slowly toward the horizon. i just happened to glance toward them and saw curves of purple from the corner of my eye – just some irises claiming a small spot in a ditch to push through to bloom.

irises always remind my of my uncle squire; he had a patch on the east side of his small house in austin, and for memorial day we’d cut some of the blooms on their sturdy stalks and take them to lay on the graves of people i’d never met but in stories and memories.

a breeze on the run

a breeze on the run

when it’s chilly out, a breeze on a run isn’t a good thing – march runs are killer because you go out and either out or back is going to be into a stiff, 15mph breeze in 45º weather. it’s not easy to run into because of the wind resistance, and it’s even worse when there’s still snow on the ground and it carries the cold with it.

but a breeze while it’s a little humid and above 75º is a godsend.

tonight i was out for a 6-mile run, and it wasn’t hot, but it was a little humid, and it was a longer run. i went out about 7:20 and over the next hour, the temp dropped a bit. i run down into avon, along the lake wobegon trail for a bit, then came back up through a residential area before turning onto the county road that winds for a mile before my circle drive.

the road curves to the north a bit after taking my turn onto it, and as i rounded the corner, i ran into a mild breeze that made the last mile of my run so much better.

you have to know that at this point in my runs, i am usually drenched with sweat. it’s saturating my hair, running down my chest and stomach, gathering at my waistband, flinging itself off my fingertips and elbows, glistening off my thighs, and i can feel it running down my calves sometimes. humidity doesn’t help, even when it’s in the 60s and low 70s.

so this constant, light breeze that i ran into was such a relief. it let some of the sweat evaporate, cooled off my face, my chest, my arms, and i could feel it chilling my sweat-soaked clothes and cooling off my skin underneath.

if there was any resistance, i made up for it with the energy i got from cooling off. i enjoyed it while it lasted in the evening light, up until i turned onto parkwood circle for the last quarter mile of my run. it was just what i needed.