I am not proud of this, not one bit, but I haven’t written
any blogs lately, partly for fear that all that would tumble forth on the paper
would be a homesick lament from yours truly.
Fall has always been my favorite of favorite seasons. Here in Texas, fall
is truly both a continuation of summer (it is still well into the 90’s) and, if
it rains, a return to spring. Many
plants that have convincingly played dead all summer get a second wind and
produce a new batch of flowers, lovely but disorienting. But Fall; with pumpkins in the field, apples
in an orchard or a Technicolor blaze of color in the trees-not so much.
However, I do realize that seasonal memories spring from
whatever your native area produced so, I wonder, what fall means to many of you
who live not surrounded by deciduous trees but by cactus? We just drove to New Mexico over the Columbus
Day weekend to meet up with two of my daughters at the Balloon fiesta. We had lived in New Mexico for a few years when
they were young and here we were, 25 years later, seeing it again.
I remember how a New Mexican Fall was the
smell of Hatch chilies tumbling in large roasters by the side of the road. Plus for two weeks in October, the
Albuquerque sky looks like a Jules Verne scene, full of vibrant colored
balloons some with impossible shapes that don’t look terribly aerodynamic. Fall
in Albuquerque.
The drive there took us through West Texas where for certain
stretches you would have to say, Fall must mean white cotton balls coating the side
of the roads. It is harvest time and
with nothing to break the wind you end up with cotton-coated highways. Further
along was a stretch of rabbit brush with its yellow bloom contrasted against
red-rimmed rocks. Fall in West Texas.
Or perhaps it is the monarch migration that means fall to
the people here. Here they come, heading
to Mexico and although I only counted 15 as we crossed West Texas perhaps, back
in the day, a sky streaming with monarchs meant it was time to stock up on
Halloween candy.
Or it must be Fall if robins
showed up in your stream bed as they did last week at our nature center, red
breasts versus red leaves. They are only
passing through, so now I know to enjoy the chirrup while it lasts. It is not the omnipresent bird here that it
is in the North.
Perhaps to a South Texan this season is marked by kettles of
hawks soaring over the Texas coast to make their leap to Central America or the
season is changing when hummingbirds take extra long drinks of nectar in an
attempt to pack on the weight before their Gulf Coast crossing. It probably just depends on what you grew up
with.
So I will buy apples at the grocery store to can applesauce and
pretend they are from an orchard and exult in any day that might be under 80. My
cedar elms are turning yellow from drought, but they would also turn yellow now
even with rain. So, Happy autumn to me,
Happy autumn to you, however you picture it.