I call February an
in-between month.
The calendar drops
February midway between those times of the year when I am particularly
energized: between the December holidays and the arrival of spring. Hovering
some distance short of the vernal equinox and still distant from the excitement
of the holidays, which by February have become a dim memory, I feel about the
month that the world has shut down.
I know critters shut
down some during February. Geese, usually chatty and gregarious, now hunker
down silently on the ice, feathers solemnly tucked in tight by their bodies,
beaks to the wind pointing like weather vanes into the blow. As the creek
freezes, it's an especially tough time for Herons who can't fish through the
thick ice. Out getting firewood the other day I found a bat. He’d rolled up in
the woodpile wedged between logs as tightly as he could manage. His fir had ice
on it but when I poked him, he moved slightly. He barred his teeth and feebly,
hissed at me. He was annoyed with me for waking him up.
I like building fires
in the fireplace and settling down with a good book in February. The open fire unfortunately draws most of the
heat from the house so it’s imperative I stay close to the fire. I dare not
wander far from it. February can get claustrophobic.
A fit of cabin fever
seized me one day. Photography offers me reasons to go outdoors. Bundling up I
grabbed a camera, and went outside looking for pictures. Except for the pale
grasses, the russet forest floor and the green stands of conifer trees, the
landscape seemed denuded and colorless.
Walking along the
edges of the creek, I saw small culverts, tiny streams and puddles where frozen
ice produced stunning visual delights, delicate swirls, flourishes and supple
textures like glaziers produce from molten glass.
As the ice forms, it arranges
itself around unremarkable natural objects and sets them apart, discretely; the
way jewelers meticulously place their finest pieces on silken pillows,
providing the proper backdrop to showcase their beauty. The result is to see
something as common as small stones, individual leaves, broken sticks and even
pine needles in remarkably new and marvelous settings. Frozen in the ice, their
individuality and character are revealed and I can see that the infrastructure
of nature is especially stunning when its parts are framed in space and viewed
singly. “For it is only framed in space,”
wrote Anne Morrow Lindbergh, "that beauty blooms. Only in space are events
and objects and people unique and significant–and therefore beautiful."
The months of our
years, although they come and go cyclically, may also have a forward thrust,
that is to say, each month points us ahead to something for the equilibrium of
our spirits as much to insure the balance of nature.
I suspect that
February is that peculiarly in-between time when, since there is little going
on to excite us outwardly, slowed down during this sedentary time of year as
the bat was, our inner vision may grow more acute and we can behold in the smaller
things like ice, rocks, leaves, and pine needles the wonder of the greater.
For all that, I’m still ready for spring.

nice. thank you.
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