Easter arrived at last, a rebirth of spirit and earth that is long overdue this year. March came in like a lion, went out like one, and winter continued into April here in Kansas, more overnight freezes in the forecast and a chance for snow predicted tonight. The closest thing to a Lamb evident in my garden this week was the small, peaceful concrete fawn that graces my viburnum bed. I found it last week, half-buried under a year of debris, and laid it on this nice new bed of straw for comfort. There perhaps, watched over and aided by the last daffodils of the season, it can tempt the weather to act more like springtime before the furnaces of summer fire up.
We began to at least pretend it was spring here this week by burning the prairie, our annual ritual here of welcoming warmer weather and clearing the fields for growth. My neighbors and I got together Friday and burned in mass, teams spread out on the periphery to protect the town from our exuberance and teams within to protect our homes from ourselves. This year's burn started out on a cold morning at 35ºF but rose to 60º temperatures by midday and it was a fine burn, windless when we were burning the edges and a mild breeze when we wanted the fire to sweep across the barren grasses. You can see the result here, a few piles of donkey dung continuing to smolder long after the fire was out elsewhere. Donkeys repeatedly pile their digested offerings in discrete places rather than sprinkling it over the area like bovines, so theses piles often burn slowly into the night, appearing as stars glowing on the dark prairie during windy times. Sometimes we combine the prairie burning ritual with a sacrifice, usually of a random shrub, fruit tree, or 4-wheeler caught in the fires, but this year we got away almost clean, with the only casualty a late-afternoon singeing of a bridge at the neighboring golf course.
I was pleased, during my rounds of the grounds after the fires, to see that my secret small grove of redbuds in the bottom had not suffered the late freezes of the ones adjacent to my hilly home. This little group sprang up volunteer a few years ago in a low area protected by the upwards slope to the south and the temperature-moderating pond just to the north. I encourage them yearly by mowing down the grasses to limit competition and very controlled burning of the area to eliminate the cedar invaders. Despite their precarious exposure to the elements, the deer, and rodents, they've done well, and I appreciate their kindness by blooming here in this little hidden world of my heart.
Within the house, spring is at least trying to overcome winter. Appropriate for Easter, this white orchid began to bloom in our sunroom this week. I apologize for the reminder of winter in the still-blooming Christmas Cactus behind it, but the purity and beauty of the orchid embraced by the warmth captured by the south-facing windows tells me that Easter, as always, foretells rebirth and the arrival of more tranquil days to come.
I've found that redbuds are pretty much one of the few frees deer will leave alone on our property. We've got many on grounds and lots in the undergrowth on the edge of the woods on the bluffside. Here's hoping these cold nights will the last gasp of Winter weather.
ReplyDeleteAmen.
DeleteI think we're all ready for spring this year.
ReplyDeleteAmen. Amen.
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