Spring’s colors brighten dreary days

                        

Yesterday was bright, warm and sunny. Today it’s cooler, and a gentle rain soothes the parched landscape, contrasting back-to-back days, yet my heart still sings.

We spent six weeks in Florida but even felt the sting of this year’s too long winter there and in Virginia after we returned home. Spring arrived, and yet we still bundled up in layered clothing under warm coats and covered ourselves with blankets at our grandson’s high school baseball games. The north wind felt like it was straight off of Lake Erie. But this is Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, not Northeast Ohio.

For the longest time the rural and suburban landscapes wore their dull winter coats of mixed gray woodlots and wind-burned grasses. The orangey-red clay fields even looked worn and tired in their weathered, muted rusty browns. That stood to reason, given all the earth had to weather in storm after storm. Usually full of sunshine, The Valley lingered in cloudy, foggy gray day after day.

All of that is now history, thanks to real spring weather’s decision to stay in the Shenandoah Valley. Blossoms of all colors have brightened landscapes far and wide. For days folks have been posting photos of wildflowers and cultivated garden flowers blooming brightly in points south of us. Now, finally, it’s our turn. Ohio, you are next.

The passage of a strong cold front seemed to do the trick for the Old Dominion. Skies cleared, and the sun ruled for several consecutive days. Petals unfolded and poked through forest leaf litter. Honeybees, wasps, flies and even a few butterflies celebrated in unison.

Crocuses, daffodils, maples, magnolias and wildflowers galore all awakened the sleeping landscape. Fields of winter wheat and suburban lawns laid fresh green carpets at every turn and corner.

A single hyacinth flower was the first to emerge at our place. Sequestered in a corner where the house meets the screened-in back porch, a single pale-pink head trumpeted forth. As it matured, the flower blushed to full-on passion pink.

Other pinks soon arrived. The redbud tree we planted last year popped tiny buttons on every branch. Across the street our neighbor’s magnolia took days to gracefully unfold her lacy pink blossoms. The wait was well worth it.

At a local arboretum, a naturalist escorted a group on a wildflower tour of early bloomers. The first had already dropped their petals while many others were only now showing. More beauties were yet to come.

Various varieties of daffodils brightened the forest hillside floor. Dutchman’s britches were ready to wear. Pretty bloodroot flowers speckled the decaying browns with their white petals and yellow centers.

Ornamental weeping cherry trees fluffed their fragrant flowers to the delight of a host of pollinators. The bees also swarmed the crimson flowers of the red maples.

Rain or shine, the ubiquitous grey squirrels that came with the house romped amid the splashes of color. Were they celebrating or were the squirrels just being squirrels?

Song sparrows sat contentedly in the morning sunshine, singing their familiar, welcome melody. In our backyard an American robin perched at a hanging seed feeder, a very unusual behavior. Below, a rusty red fox sparrow made a first-ever appearance as a yard bird.

All the color and warmth drew humans outdoors too. Mowers hummed, mulchers mulched, pruners pruned and gardeners gardened. It was a collaborative symphony and natural art show.

To read more The Rural View, visit Bruce Stambaugh at www.thebargainhunter.com.


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