Spring, you say? Tell that to my snow-covered patio furniture and the frozen mound of earth covering last week’s front garden excavations. Tell that to my friend Kathy, who just posted her annual “This is b–ls–t” photo (shown above).
Though these ups and downs of temperature and precipitation are actually quite common in Western New York at this time, there is an unsettled feeling to everything. I wouldn’t be surprised if we had 90-degree days in May and maybe a freeze at the end of July, followed by a monsoon.
We Great Lake-adjacent residents can be somewhat smug about our proximity to these large bodies of fresh water and the mild summer temps that prevail here as other areas in the U.S. are either literally on fire – or it just seems that way.
But weather extremes have found us. I’m not talking about snowstorms; we’re used to a few each year and the cover is good for the gardens. But last summer, wildfire smoke drifted down from Ontario and unseasonable warmth is more common at other times. Snow on the patio furniture in mid-March? That’s the way it’s supposed to be.
Maybe it’s the fact that Lake Erie, the shallowest of the five, never froze this year. In the past, we’ve been able to walk out on the lake and check out the ice fisherman and their little blue huts. According to NOAA, Great Lakes ice levels are the lowest, at 2.7%, they’ve ever been since their records began. We had temps in the 70s in early March and my snowdrops were out the earliest they’ve been, with some blooming in late January.
What’s happening now is normal. Snow on the first day of spring is expected. Spring is never much of a season here at the best of times. Autumn is much, much better.
But normal has become unmoored from its former definitions. So, in a way, it’s somewhat comforting to look out on the frosty white landscape.
Ahhh, spring!
The photo is lovely — thanks for that. In my view, March is the cruelest (sp?) month.
Fosythia is blooming about a month before “normal” here in northern Illinois. But thankfully no snow … yet.
I thawt this article was gonna be about the pretty Leucojum vernum now blooming. Nope. But I could’ve written something about our freezing nights and 70 degree days here in the Mid-Atlantic. Maybe, Mother Nature is going through menopause?
Here in MN, we just finished the winter that wasn’t. To date, we only received about 14″ of snow and the ground was essentially frost free for the entire winter. Now we are awaiting the arrival of 2-4″ of snow later today and possibly a second much larger system coming in late this weekend into early next week. I, for one, will take the precipitation in any form as we are already in a drought situation!
Recognized Smug Creek immediately, beautiful throughout the year. Was actually happy to see the nuisance snow. The T shirt temps were causing me stress as the heart wanted to start spring garden prep, but the rational brain kept saying “ it’s too early”. The little bit of snow nicely covers up all desire to get out there and do something, anything!
Yeah, a little bit of snow isn’t awful…unless it’s 6 inches of wet stuff and then 2-3 inches of ice on top on Mar. 23. Nothing much in Jan. or Feb., 50’s in early Mar., so snowdrops, dwarf iris, crocus, etc. figured it was time to pop. Now they are buried….sigh. At least I have an amaryllis opening inside. Soldier on!