Category Archives: Weather +Climate

Ring a Ding, Hear Them Sing, Holiseason Is Here!

Samhain                                                                      Fallowturn Moon

Geese honking, flying in some direction, no longer always south.  Trucks with rickety wooden sides piled high with split oak come into the cities to sell firewood door to door.  Golf carts head south on flat bed trucks.  Irrigation company trucks haul air compressors behind them to blow out irrigation systems.  Bee colonies board trucks headed for California, Texas, Florida where crops can be pollinated over our winter.  Signs for various aspects of deer processing go up.  County Market near us has been advertising sausage mixes and consultation with experts.

Soon the early Christmas trees attached to the tops of cars will appear on Round Lake Boulevard, cut at the cut your own place north of us.  The skies have already turned gray, the wind chill.  Snow comes first in this month, too.

All Hallow’s today.  In one interesting variation on this theme I found that in some traditions this is the day the souls of those who died in the last year are judged.  Cheery thought, eh?

We have entered, according to my sacred calendar, holiseason.  It stretches from Samhain to Epiphany and includes Samhain, All Souls, Día de los Muertos  Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s and Epiphany but also Hanukkah, Posada, Deepavali (Diwali), Advent, Boxing Day, the Mayan 5 useless days at the end of the year and my favorite, my low holy day, the Winter Solstice.

So light those candles, dig out the decorations, crank up the holiday music and let’s party like it’s Holiseason 2012.

Trick or Treat?

Fall                                                                          Fallowturn Moon

Trick or treat?  As Halloween, or Samhain as some of us neo-pagans refer to it, lies just a day ahead, mother nature has once again cranked up the volume.  The world is changing! Folks up and down the eastern seaboard have no power, but plenty of water, wind and tragedy.  Here we sit in the middle of the continent, faraway from these ocean driven weather monsters, hoping that friends and relatives out there are ok.  Definitely trick this year for them.

(CNN picture from Monday as Sandy headed inland.)

We’re no strangers to meteorological danger, but ours tends to come in early spring and summer when the heat powers up tornadoes and derechoes; then again in the winter, when moist Gulf air combines with slumping Arctic cold to create blizzards.  Right now we’re in the low excitement season as far as weather goes.

Look for our annual Celtic new years post tomorrow as the thinning of the veil between this world and the other world makes crossing over easier.

This and that

Fall                                                            Fallowturn Moon

Put my 500 word essay on a reducing diet and got it down to 350.

Spent much of the day trying–again–to reorganize my space so there’s room for all my books plus art plus travel souvenirs plus computers, desk and me.

Kate and I harvested greens today, the last of them, and Kate put up another large batch of low country greens.  We’ve got onions and tomatoes in the refrigerator plus carrots and leeks in the ground.

Looked out back today, south, up toward the poplars, the tallest trees on our property.  A big gust of wind blew threw them and a rain of yellow-orange leaves flew into the air.  As the air filled with dancing, falling leaves, a bird flew through them, headed west.  With the gray sky it was a perfect fall moment.

Jason and the Argonauts

Fall                                                                                   Harvest Moon

The Harvest Moon has waned almost to New.  Leaves have begun to disappear, going from haute couture to essentials during the Harvest Moon’s month.  The temperature has taken a turn toward the cool, too, welcome in this household though not necessarily in others.

Working out stalled for me when I felt an ouch beyond what I felt made good sense.  On Monday I have my post-op visit and should have better information then.  I walk and lift modest weight with no twinge now, so I imagine I’ll be back to working out as soon as next week.  My capacity to recover quickly from this operation reinforces the resistance work I’ve done over the years.

Spent this morning dipping myself in the waters of the Jason and Medea story, Book VII of the Metamorphoses.   It was hard.  Not sure what happens, but some days the translating flows, other times it comes as if clotted and running through a pipe with bends and twists.  Today was a clotted and twisted day.  This is where we get the story of the golden fleece among other narratives.

A bit more now in the afternoon, just to see if I can bounce past the morning’s grind.

I also have the week 3 quiz to do in the Greek and Roman Mythology class.  Probably tomorrow.  Without much effort beyond review of my notes I’m hitting about 92% and that’s fine.  I could pump it up, but I have no need.  Look for a post in the next few days about some interesting things I’ve learned about the Odyssey and about myth.  Interesting to me, anyhow.

How Raven Became Black

Fall                                                              Harvest Moon

Another brilliant blue day, with slashes of orange and red, sky filled with high white clouds. These northern fall days expand the mind, let it reach out beyond the horizon, taking the breadth and height of it all into the soul, the inner life growing proportionally.  No problem with this season growing longer.

Lights out at the MIA this morning.   I wasn’t there, but apparently security gates came wheeling down in the galleries and the place went dark for an hour or two.  Very dark in certain areas.  I imagine the Japanese galleries and the Pacific Islands and the Islamic and maybe Southeast Asia would pitch black.  They have no window light.  None.  Wonder which images came to life?

Our afternoon tour got delayed because the kids were at the Children’s Theatre, attached physically to the museum, and it went dark, too, delaying their show.  This was a big group, 153 kids altogether.

Since I’m taking a class on mythology, it’s worth recounting here a frequent occurrence at one of my favorite objects:  the Transformation Mask by Kwakwaka’wakw sculptor Richard Hunt. (both pictures from the MIA website)  I tell a story about Raven, who had white feathers, then met Gray Eagle’s daughter, fell in love and visited her father’s dwelling.  Raven finds the sun, the moon, the stars, water and fire inside Gray Eagle’s lodge, steals all of these things and gives them to the people who have been living in darkness.  In spreading fire he carries a brand in his beak and his feathers are burnt.  That’s how Raven became black.

I tell this story as it is and leave it.  Most of the time, some kid asked, “Is it real?”  In return I ask, “What do you think?”  Usually kids accept the story as “real.”  I don’t press this interpretation, but I happen to agree with them.  It’s true because it explains the birth of the Raven clan and its totemic animal.  In this sense, too, it is real.  As real it gets.

Wednesday Big Event: Flu Shot

Fall                                                                      Harvest Moon

Worked on revising Missing this am, then went out with my retired spouse to the local CVS, into the minute clinic and we got our flu shots.  A real treat.  I don’t use them for anything else, but for getting a flu shot, the minute clinics are perfect.

Our dwarf lilac (now huge) has dropped all of its leaves though most trees and shrubs continue to hang to at least a few.  The only other with no leaves at all is the ash in the vegetable garden.  It feels like November, or an old-fashioned October.

When we went out today, there scallop shell cirrus high in a blue blue sky, a bright sun and various shades of red and orange all round, reflected back to us from Round Lake.  A northern fall day.  Just right.

 

Their Grey Eminence

Fall                                                                 Harvest Moon

The Vikings looked good today; good, not great, but hey that’s a hell of lot better than last year.

The look and feel of mid-November outside.  The Norwegian maple across the tree has dropped its skirt, flared down around its ankles and now stands almost naked to the elements.  Trees undress before the coldest weather.  The opposite tact taken by Minnesota humans.

James Whitcomb Riley

Our woods take up the west horizon so we don’t see the sunset, but when I walked down to the mailbox this afternoon, there, across Round Lake, the late setting sun added its burnt orange to the maples and oaks.  Cirrus clouds gathered in waves sat watching it all, grey eminences, quiet and unmoving.

This time of year always pushes me back toward Indiana, a Hoosier boyhood.  In the post above this I’m including a poem Indiana’s Poet Laureate, James Whitcomb Riley.  My mother read him to me when I was a small boy and, in fact, he has some relationship to our family, thought just what it is I don’t recall.  I do know that my Uncle Riley and my cousin Richard’s son, Uncle Riley’s grandson, also bears the name.

Thinking of Spring, Experiencing Early Winter

Fall                                                           Harvest Moon

 

File this under what was he thinking?  I have a bulb order upstairs and it will need to go in the ground this week.  It will be cold this week.  Be careful what you wish for.  Both the bees and the bulbs need attention, not to mention that last $%#@! breach in the orchard fence by Vega the wander dog.

The bulbs can for sure go in under the 30 pound lifting restriction.  I prefer to dig with a shovel first, then plant; but, I can use a trowel, the old way.  Still, I don’t feel up to it today and the weather.  Well, it is changing.  And you won’t need a weatherman to tell you by tomorrow.

Local weather mage, Paul Douglas, says it’s fire and ice.  Fire watch over much of the state today, plowable snow possible in the north tomorrow.  Not to mention a possible 10″ of snow for Grand Forks, North Dakota.

Looks like Sunday is the bulb and bee day.

Down to Here, Down to There…

Fall                                                                       Harvest Moon

Kate went, oooh!  What?  She came into the workshop bearing a foot long hank of hair, still gathered in a small rubber band.  Mine.  From the day I decided to stop wearing my hair long.  The thing is.  This is beautiful, auburn hair.  It still has sheen and highlights.  Boy, that must have been a while ago.

Now.  Would have been fit for the gray pony tail radio hour.  Nothing but Jefferson Airplane, early Stones and Led Zepplin.  And my hair.

So ends the play, Hair! in its local run.

Got out the sledge hammer, carried snow fence stakes to the orchard, dug a small pit, pounded one stake into the ground and put a plastic covered wire round the leaning tree of Zestra, pulled and secured.  Pretty good, but it took a two by four wedged in the earth coming from the other direction to secure the tree upright.  Another stake and more plastic coated wire around another leaning apple tree.

Inside I coarsely chopped onions, potatoes, leeks, carrots and simmered them in homemade vegetable broth with a stick of butter and lots of pepper.  25 minutes later I added 6 pealed tomatoes, quartered, a half pound of mushrooms and simmered 10 minutes more.  Winter vegetable soup.

Kate gathered herbs and the last of the tomatoes.  We’ll have to cover the peppers.  Freeze warning tonight:  25-32 degrees.  She also picked raspberries and the leeks I needed for the winter vegetable soup.

(Minnesota freeze map, Sept. 22, 2012)

She also cleaned and stored our Zestra crop.  60 or 70 apples.  The bagged apples were in much better shape than the non-bagged ones.  That was on purpose to see if bagging really helped.  It’s such a pain I wanted to know for sure.

Autumn

Lugnasa                                                          New (Autumn) Moon

Paul Douglas (local weather doyen) reminds us that meteorological autumn begins September 1st.  I suppose.  Autumn begins for me when we have days like this one.  Low 40’s when I get up.  A chill rain.  Nights growing cooler.  Leaves changing, falling.

(West Wind.  early 1900’s.  Thomson influenced the Canadian Group of Seven though he died before they formed.)

Now that ancientrail begins.  The one where straightening up the house, restocking the larder and then, that final touch, turning the vent system over from summer to winter mark steps of readiness.

Like a denning creature, bear or beaver say, making the place warm and comfortable for the cold months ahead we burrow into our houses.  Ready for when the north wind doth blow.