Saturday, October 10, 2015

The Wind Comes

It is just before 4:00 on a windy afternoon in autumn, the kind of windy day where two hundred foot tree tops wave back and forth against a semi-cloudy blue sky, the kind of windy day that causes leaves to shush most of mankind’s back ground noise into the distance, the kind of windy day that turns the descending sun into stars of light that peak through the tree branches.

Chickadees come close to the feeder and scold me for sitting on my deck and interfering with their peaceful snacking, but quickly give up and steal a sunflower seed and fly away to a tall oak at the edge of the yard where they pummel it against a branch until the sweet meat is released and like small children they come again and again.

The noise of the wind rises and falls and clouds up in the sky slowly grow from misty white lace to cotton balls that link to form a downy comforter slowly hiding the blue blanket.  I keep thinking that some type of big vista music should be building in the background to accompany this fall change in weather.

The turkey vultures that look so raw and ugly on the ground have become brown feather kites waltzing in the air, dancing so gracefully with each gust that they have been transposed to sky dancers.  They sweep and fall and no longer seem part of this earth.  I am the ugly grounded being.

Brown dry leaves dance at my feet as the wind pushes them across the deck.  They claw and scratch but their time is done.  They soon will become soil and feed another plant in the spring.  Now they are old and veined and torn in places reminding me of myself.  I was once young and lime green and full of the sun’s energy.

A small tuft of a groundsel tree seed is caught in the table top struggling to be released on the important journey of regeneration.  The wind continues to bring whispers of winter hurrying me along to collect buckets of kindling, to split more wood and to inhale deeply the warm air before it  is gone.

Everything remains such a luxurious green that the season is still cloaked in deceptive costume.  We have had the rains that made the plants think the change in season was not coming.  Even the fescue has re-emerged to hide the healthy crab grass and we can walk once again on soft velvet.  But the wind is  like a mother's hands shooing her children  on their way home before nightfall.

None of us know how many of these moments are left for us, so I savor each one.  I study and listen and smell the beginning of autumn as it opens the door to begin its starring role.

12 comments:

  1. What a lovely peaceful interlude you have shared! I know just what you mean about turkey vultures... So ugly on the ground...so beautiful in flight. We watch them fly over our fields and forest quite often.

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  2. Enjoy the wind while she is still your friend. In winter, she is the enemy, cutting with cold.

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  3. You really got going on the metaphors in this description of fall. Nicely done.

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  4. Well done! You captured the season.

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  5. Wonderful writing! Our wind today is rain laden bluster, creating a layer of litter on lawns and streets.

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  6. Oh but this is lovely! The wind as a mother shooing her children home is a marvelous image!

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  7. You write such romantic poetry of the winds, and out here the AC is on and we roast. Not a bit of romance here.

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  8. Nice piece. Good description of the change that is coming. I look forward to the changes of nature and usually have few complaints about what mother brings us. -- barbara

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  9. Stunning the things that you say, cheers Tabor.

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  10. Thanks for reminding me about the precious gift nature gives me...
    I have a feeder out my window- so many finches here, n nuthatches.

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  11. Friday now. I still admire the way your words are shaped to the wind. Here we are fractionally cooler, but the humidity is 100%.

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Glad to hear from you once again. I really like these visits. Come sit on this log and tell me what you are thinking.