[CT Birds] Spring
Dennis Varza
dennisvz at optonline.net
Tue Feb 5 22:10:47 EST 2008
Hi Folks
Here are some thoughts on Spring
The seasons are more than dates on a calendar. It is more of a sense
or perception. Different people use different criteria for spring. My
cousin once commented that spring is here when the Robins arrive. I
told him they were here all year. I even bet him that he could pick
any date and I’ll show him a robin. Fortunately he didn’t take the
bet, some days in February could be pretty tough. But really, there
is a time when all of a sudden the Robins turn up on lawns (the
migrants) instead of skulking in thickest. When I was in farm country
Pennsylvania spring became the first meadowlarks. A wise guy friend
in college said spring is when the Great Horned Owls start nesting
(early January). I have come to look at the returning Red-winged
Blackbirds as the sign of spring, I wait all winter to hear them
calling in the marshes, then after a week of it it gets annoying.
Other popular signs are singing Cardinals and House Finches. If you
are plant oriented you would consider Snowdrops, Crocus, Skunk
Cabbage, willows and Red Maples.
I have come to categorize each day as either a spring, summer, fall,
or winter day. The weather alternates between cold fronts and warm
fronts producing warm and cold days. This time of year the warm days
feel like spring days and the cold days like winter. Come May, the
warm days feel like summer and the cold days like spring. Come late
July, the cold days feel like autumn and the warm days like summer.
and In November the warm days feel like autumn and the cold days
winter. It is not necessarily temperature that determines the “feel
of a day” but you know it when you experience it. I remember one
bright clear day in early January and I was shoveling snow and it
occurred to me, that this was a spring day!
When is it spring for you?
Dennis Varza
Fairfield
More information about the CTBirds
mailing list