For the past two months
we’ve been witness to a gradual changing of foliage
from summer’s greens to autumn’s truly spectacular
reds, oranges and yellows, to the current stark landscape
of trees stripped bare. Temperatures have been dipping
well below zero on almost every night, and with daylight
savings in effect the sun is quite jarringly setting
as early as three-thirty in the afternoon.
It has become time to rug up, add layers, and the old
furnace in my basement has creaked and whirred to life
for yet another season.
On weekends, when a walk around town just
a few weeks ago might have been witness to families picnicking
and playing in the park, boats out on the river for an
afternoon, or summer cookouts, now such scenes have been
replaced by pumpkins and corn husks on front porches
pointing us to Halloween and Thanksgiving, the ‘swoosh,
swoosh’ of folks raking seemingly endless piles
of fallen leaves in their yards, and the marina looks
like a graveyard for yachts wrapped tightly in white
rubber shrouds.
Baseball diamonds that were tended to with care until
September have been allowed to grow over and scar muddy
with the cleats of high school footballers. Burly hunters
in alternating camouflaged and bright orange jackets
flock to bars and talk of moose and deer and the ones
that got away. Others have turned their attention to
banter of ice hockey and handle Russian, French and Czech
names with the experience of seasoned fans.
No snow yet, though the signs are there,
for the clouds are growing darker, and lower in the sky.
My car has been ‘winterised’; I’ve bought that
ice scraper, and locals are eager to warn me, regularly
and at length, that I’m in for a real surprise
up ahead.
Perhaps they’re right, but I think I’m
ready.
I’ve seen some snow in my time but
will welcome the ferocity of white and cold ahead.
Ezy Reading is out every
Monday.