Friday, August 24, 2018

A Short Update on a Post from a Couple of Weeks Ago



A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the times in August here in Mississippi when we get a brief but wonderful taste of the early days of Autumn.  While we are in the midst of the summer heat and when we think we can stand the oppressive heat no longer, a day or two of cooler weather tempts of the days of fall yet to come.  We are experiencing exactly that weather as I write these lines. We are in enjoying "Autumn's Tease."This morning the temperature was in the lower 60s, which is unusual for this time of year in Mississippi.  The air is dry and the deep blue sky is higher and wider than those in Montana. 

William Faulkner from the Cofield
Collection
Again the quote from William Faulkner, “...in August in Mississippi there are a few days somewhere about the middle of the month when suddenly there’s a foretaste of fall, it’s cool, there’s a lambence, a soft, a luminous quality of light, as though it came not from just today but from back in the old classic times.  It might have fauns and satyrs and the gods and —-from Greece, from Olympus in it somewhere. It lasts just a day or two,  then it’s gone...it reminded me of that time, of luminosity older than our Christian civilization.”
Until next time...enjoy your days.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

Late Summer in Southern USA

Early goldenrod bloom showing signs that summer is waning and fall is on its way to Mississippi. 



Late yesterday brought heavy rains to our place here in the country. We had winds in excess of 25 mph and close to an inch of rain here and the house and it seemed to come down in buckets at times. Roads briefly flooded and my drive home was challenging at times due to the intense rain, but once home I enjoyed sitting on my porch and watching the weather roll through. It rained off and on during the night and the morning brought a freshness to the countryside. August is usually a dry month here in Mississippi and rain is always welcome when the changing weather patterns of the late season often bring rains and cooler weather that breaks the normally hot, dry weather giving us a taste of what we can expect a couple of months from now.

On my early morning walk, I noticed goldenrod which first popped open its first blooms on August 3rd is farther along in the bloom than is usual for this time of the year. I watch that bloom and, more often than not, can predict our first frost of the fall within a day or two. This year may not prove to be a good one to use this sign of nature to predict that date but, it is really too early in the season to say that conclusively.

Pet Update...our family has grown again.

If you have followed this blog for long you probably know already that our family is a household full of animal lovers.  Since we live in the country, in the middle of a pine tree farm we have abundant room for lots of animals.  Our menagerie is comprised of two horses, a potbelly pig, a number of chickens, a cat, a rabbit, a ferret, a sugar glider, an aquarium full of tropical fish, a goldfish and eight dogs.  Three of those dogs were either found abandoned on the road or left on the outskirts of our property by someone who obviously doesn't have the respect for life that we do.  Yes, they were left there to fend for themselves because someone decided they didn't want to take care of them any longer. Two of the three were puppies when we found them and the other is what we think was an old puppy mill stud who had developed a skin condition and outlived his usefulness to an unethical breeder who probably should not have one dog much less a yard full of them who was put out on the highway to die. Well, Cooper, as we named him, has become a sweet yet cantankerous, loved member of our family.  He is old, very old and has only one tooth; a rather long lower canine that protrudes out of his mouth making him look like a muppet more than a dog.  He is a great dog who asks little of his family.

Anyway, the two puppies have come of age and yesterday we had them spayed.  We feel strongly that our animals should be spayed. It makes them happier, healthier and much better companions. The surgery went well and the girls are at home resting so they can resume their duties of joyfully protecting their family and home.

These two little girls are wonderful additions to our family.  The older of the two who is about 18 months old is either an English Lab or a mostly English Lab mix.  Her name is Hadley and she is a natural retriever, full of spirit, life, and energy. She is a fearless watchdog and that is always welcome in the country but in spite of her penchant to protect is a joy around the house. if she has a flaw she thinks she is a 42-pound lap dog. She will lie at your feet for hours, fully satisfied to be with her adopted family. Then without a moments notice or any warning, she will climb on the sofa with you and try her best to get in your lap.  Her nose goes to your face and she stares longingly into your eyes, making you completely and totally aware that she is wanting a little more attention than you have been giving her. 

The other little girl is still less than a year old. She is almost solid white. We had her DNA tested and it showed that she is a Swiss Shepherd, Great Pyrenees, Lab mix. Macie is her name and she and her sister were left on the railroad tracks that cross through our family property. A friend adopted her sister and she became one of our family. She was about an eight or ten-week-old puppy when she showed up last December.  Now at probably ten-months-old, she weighs in at almost 60 pounds. She is going to grow to be a much bigger dog and is presently eating us out of house and home. Macie is a gentle giant and except for the length of her hair looks remarkably like a Swiss Shepherd. Like most shepherds, she is protective of her family.  When guests show up at the house she expresses no aggression, other than her very loud barking but, always places herself between the guest and her family until she is sure there is no threat. Once she has accepted that there is no threat to her family, our friends are her friends, too. She is a majestic dog and another very special member of our family.  

Both of these girls are on "bed rest." Of course, they really aren't on bed rest but, they are taking it pretty easy this morning. I can tell their anesthesia has completely worn off but they are still lying around a good bit. As the day rolls on they will feel better and better.  These girls have a pretty good life; not a dogs life by any stretch of the imagination.  Both of these girls have added a lot of love to our family.  

...Today is Saturday

Well, today is Saturday and I have to get to the chores that the end of the week always brings.  I am putting my computer away and grabbing a bite to eat to go with this early morning cup of coffee and then I am off to take care of a few chores.  

Until next time...I hope you are having as good a weekend as I am.  




Sunday, August 12, 2018

Thinking About Pulling Out my Flannel Shirts

Thinking about pulling out the flannel shirts is all I can do right now. It will be at least seven or eight weeks before it is cool enough to even think about wearing a flannel shirt, but I am dreaming of the cooler weather and the changing leaves.

A day or two ago the mercury in the thermometer was boiling up to near the century mark and with the humidity, it was an almost unbearable 105+ degrees. Today it is a hot and humid morning and my mind is wanting to take me to cooler fall days with leaves turning the warm colors of the season which bring with them a crispness in the air that lets you know that a fire will soon be in the fireplace and frost will soon cover the rooftops, lawns, and car tops.  As I sit on my porch sweltering in the heat, I look ahead to the cooler days ahead and think of wearing my favorite red flannel shirt as I move about completing my morning chores.

I have for years remarked of that couple of cool days that often come in the middle of August. It is those days that give us a small taste of the autumn that is still six to eight weeks away in our part of the county.  I have never known what that time is called so I researched it.  I have been unable to find a name for this season. We have all heard of Indian Summer. Those are the days in mid to late autumn when we experience unseasonably warm, dry weather and we enjoy the last of our summer gardens before the first frost comes and changes the landscape, readying it for late fall and winter to come. Since there is no name for it.  I think this time when autumn blows a kiss backward into summer should have its own name. Maybe, for now, I will just refer to it as Autumn’s Tease. Whatever it is called, I am ready for that brief respite from the heat that comes with those days.

My grandfather was a county farm agent in a much simpler time.  He was born around 1885 and worked as a county agent until the 1950s.  When I was a boy and after he retired, we would sit for hours and talk about the weather, the crops, the wildlife and many other things.  He taught me Much about the seasons and life in those hours we spent sitting outdoors talking and sharing.  Pop as we called him, told me of this time of year and those early days of autumn which tease us in the middle of summer.  Pop was obviously not the only one who noticed these days. One of my favorite authors and a native Mississippian, William Faulkner summarized this time more eloquently than I am capable.

He said, “...in August in Mississippi there are a few days somewhere about the middle of the month when suddenly there’s a foretaste of fall, it’s cool, there’s a lambence, a soft, a luminous quality of light, as though it came not from just today but from back in the old classic times.  It might have fauns and satyrs and the gods and —-from Greece, from Olympus in it somewhere. It lasts just a day or two,  then it’s gone...it reminded me of that time, of luminosity older than our Christian civilization.”

Men simply are not capable of writing words as beautiful as this today...I only wish I were.  For now, I must content myself to sit in admiration of the writer of those words and dream of the days in the not too distant future when I can pull out my flannel shirts and enjoy the coming autumn.

Until next time...John.

Friday, August 3, 2018

Counting the August Fogs

Folklore has it...no wait weatherlore has it that for every fog in August you will have a snow in winter.  Today is the third day of August and there was no doubt about it, we had a heavy fog this morning. So, by this measure, we should be expecting at least one snowfall in Central Mississippi this winter.

I am certain that weatherlore is based as much on observation through the years of common weather occurrences as on educated speculation,  but from all my readings and observations through the years it is amazing how much of this folklore seems to be correct. 

I always predict our first frost of the fall by when the goldenrod is in full bloom.  I look at wooly worm coats for color and thickness, the color of our local whitetail deer coats, how strongly a pig builds its nest of sticks and numerous other things to predict the coming winter weather.  You can say it is just folklore, but I have often maintained a garden deep into the autumn based on my predictions.  I have also harvested my last vegetables early in the season just to beat a frost the goldenrod told me was coming. 

I am in a rush. I am heading to my day job...the one that pays so I will have to go for now.  Until next time...