Somewhere around mid-July, the air starts filling with clouds of tiny insect life-forms illuminated by a sun you’re a bit sick of. The underfoot grasses, soft and moist just a few weeks ago now crackle with each footstep, and mats of green algae form on the surface of the ever-stagnating river. The mornings are much quieter as nesting birds become secretive about their activities and it finally must be admitted that the joyous uplifting of spring has passed for another year. The air smells like fallen fruit and there is often a hint of smoke in the olfactory background in the days of “fire season”.

On the calendar, spring is long passed, but the heart will stretch it out as long as possible. After all, we had a late frost/late rains so it started late, right?

The anticipation, which is part of the fun, begins in January if you’re disciplined, so honestly, being able to stretch spring into an entire half year if you wait to let go of it until mid-July is almost greedy. And maybe it is greed that brings on the biggest let-downs when it is finally dropped.

But the heart is still beating and new anticipation arises. Glimpses of fledgling songbirds appear, and they don’t know what to be afraid of yet so they might let you look at them for a while. Kingfishers break their nesting season silence and patrol the river again, swooping from low to high, the loud squeaky rattle that is their call filling the airwaves.
Large youngsters such as Great Blue Herons and Great Egrets appear, not quite grown into their elegance, and as early migration begins, you never know what might show up and get you on the rare bird alert.


Just about everyone is eating berries. And so the summer ripens.

When this time of the year wanes, the let-down won’t be as severe, and will be replaced by the renewed stir of anticipation, this time of the rains and the rising river full of salmon. And so on.







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