Back in March, when I was complaining about a series of heavy spring snows in New England, Deb said, “Save a picture for August, when we really need it.” I think the time has come.
Folks in the Northeast are not used to having temperatures day after day in the 90s combined with crazy-high humidity. Friends my age seem to find it totally enervating. If we can’t get to a bit of shade or find a breeze, we just sit like lumps — or move ve-ery slowly. Not all houses have air conditioning. In the past, it was seldom needed.
So it’s time to stop complaining about the heat and remember how I complained about the cold in March. Deb was right. One’s perspective changes. The picture above was taken on March 13 when I really would have preferred to see spring flowers coming up. Looks quite pleasant to me now.
I also have a few summer pictures to share. The tiny bird on what appears to be a telephone pole is actually a very large, fierce bird called an osprey. Towns along the New England coast construct special nesting platforms to keep osprey from building on telephone poles. You may see many such platforms if you take Amtrak through Connecticut. At this time of year, there may be several young ones — no longer babies — perfecting their new fishing skills.
And I include a bouquet of local wildflowers, the boats in New Shoreham’s Great Salt Pond, and four photos demonstrating how the lotus at a neighbor’s house looks as it opens. I have recorded this other years, but every year, it’s a miracle.
I can’t help noting that even the lotus seemed to take the sweltering summer rather hard. Several blossoms simply bowed over, hiding their faces somewhere among their roots in the pond. I know how they feel.
I just got in the house from weed whacking and working in the garden ,as it is 92* at 6:00 ,you know I was one sweaty dirty lady. Your post of the snow was great,it really is pretty,and once again I’m reminded of the silence that comes with snow. Your lotus is beautiful !
Thank you, Deb. It was a smart idea you had.
Thanks for sharing the picture from March. I need the cool too as it has been and is very hot summer in Sweden too
I had heard that it was hot there from Erik. And Suzanne said Berlin had little air conditioning–apart from the hotels.
Oh, yeah–bring that snow!! Or at least the cool, low humidity of autumn. I’m fascinated with those lotuses–as I’ve said I’ve never seen them growing–so lovely!
I hope autumn isn’t hot this year.
Love the progression of the lotus–beautiful.
I should also add the showerheadlike pod that appears after all the petals fall. So exotic. For Rhode Island, yet.