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the breath of fall

It has gotten unusually cold all of a sudden, much too early for the beginning of fall. A dreary drizzle bore down all day yesterday, as a reminder of why I revile the cold season.

I’ve been looking through gardening books for ideas on how to make the winter garden more interesting, and to my great distress I realized all of those ideas are already incorporated in my garden, except for two: red dogwood branches and holly. And no, I wouldn’t say there is winter interest. Nature didn’t create winter interest, it created dreary monochrome landscape and frozen muck.

Way too early for depressing winter conversation. I’m hoping the weather will recover and keep us in summer for a bit longer, but unfortunately I know that’s not how it works. There are two kinds of yearly patterns: the ones with harsh winters and extreme summers, which tend to be dry and have a very long and warm fall, and the wet ones, with mild rainy winters and cool rainy summers, which like to retire early and regale us all with uninspiring wet foliage (fall leaves need sunshine and warmth to develop the sugar that gives them their beautiful coloring).

After a day of November preview the sun came back, and today had sunshine and blue skies, but it’s still cold. The plant nursery was filled with fall decorations, pumpkins and Halloween props. Maybe fall is not so dreary after all. Oh, mercy me, I just realized the fall raking season is fast approaching. Groan. Not thinking about it! Not thinking about it!

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