I always thought of myself as a
summertime guy. Maybe the image is left
over from blissful school days, Spring Break, icy beer, and romance on the
beach. Are those my memories, or
somebody else’s? Seems they were mine…now
where was I?
Lived over a decade in a sunny
clime. Temps of 60ºF (16ºC) brought out
parkas, gloves, and worries about your kids waiting in the morning cold for the
school bus. Most of the time it was
year-round shorts and short sleeves. Central heating was optional. Air
conditioning was not.
Now I live in Germany and I’ve come
to look forward to the four seasons.
Summer flashes by in a short burst,
ending in wine fests and whole pigs roasting on an open fire. Autumn takes over like a charging bull. Hints of wood smoke tantalizingly curl and
linger on residential streets. Wool
scarves are part of the uniform. Warm
rain turns to cold rain. Clouds mask the
sun.
I help my neighbors stack a big
supply of chopped wood. Oak. Cherry.
Elm. Takes four of us, working rapidly for forty minutes.
My garden is gone, replaced with
naked brown stalks and half naked trees.
The last faithful blooms try their best, but it’s only a desperate act
of charity.
A field of winter grass grows next to dead corn stalks |
Some days the sun teases, but soon
disappears at the slightest excuse. I
walk down the narrow roads, trails, and footpaths. Beautiful color abounds, but soon the tree
limbs will be only black scratches against a wall of cement gray clouds.
Ever wonder why the leaves change
color? Here’s a short answer:
“…in the fall, because of changes in
the length of daylight and changes in temperature, the leaves stop their
food-making process. The chlorophyll breaks down, the green color disappears,
and the yellow to orange colors become visible and give the leaves part of
their fall splendor.
At the same time other chemical
changes may occur, which form additional colors through the development of red
anthocyanin pigments. Some mixtures give rise to the reddish and purplish fall
colors of trees such as dogwoods and sumacs, while others give the sugar maple
its brilliant orange.
The autumn foliage of some trees
show only yellow colors. Others, like many oaks, display mostly browns. All
these colors are due to the mixing of varying amounts of the chlorophyll
residue and other pigments in the leaf during the fall season.”
If you need the full explanation, here’s the link. http://www.esf.edu/pubprog/brochure/leaves/leaves.htm
Here's
another thing that robs me of sleep: Why do we have two names for autumn,
or fall, or autumn, or....? Autumn comes from French (autumne) and farther
back, from Latin. Fall came into the language in 16th or 17th Century
England, probably because leaves 'fall’ and poets noticed. Popular for
awhile, but now is heard mostly in America.
Doesn’t matter what you call
it. This time of year, nature’s beauty
astounds me. I see what I was missing
all those years in the sunshine. But after a couple of cold ones, I think back to Spring Break and icy beer and bikinis….aw shit, why do I
do that to myself?
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