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Jeepers creepers, winter’s back… — 7 Comments

  1. I grew up next to a swamp. The sound of the spring peepers from the nearby swamp was a welcome sign that spring had come. Definitely one of my favorite sounds.

  2. From spending time in Michigan, i recall the peepers for 3 or 4 days in spring, then silence in the woods and trees the rest of the summer.

    Down south you get synchronized critters singing in the trees all summer long. A most wonderful sound i’ll never take for granted again.

  3. The daffodils here in upstate NY are 3 1/2 weeks ahead of when they bloomed in 2007 (a year when I happened to take a dated picture.) My early little scarlet tulips, usually not seen until April, have already bloomed and gone; the crocuses are already done and gone, replaced by the blue and white April scilla spreading all over the lawn, and the red spears that will be peonies are 8 or 10 inches high. The lilacs are far, far, far ahead of schedule, putting out good-sized green leaves and tiny tight-furled purple buds we don’t usually see until well into May. All of that’s unprecedented in a quarter-century of memories of living here.

    But the yellow winter aconite was right on time, blooming in the first week of March exactly when it always does, and the joyful spring peepers showed up this week, exactly when they always do — so I’m not sure just how scrambled the ordinary timetables are. Tonight, we seem to be moving back into a more recognizable version of “spring.” The forecast low is 17 degrees and the wind’s ripping twigs out of the trees. The daffodils will be just fine, but I’m worried for the lilac buds and the apple blossoms, which have succumbed in the past to frosts in May, let alone March!

  4. Oh, and forsythia. Ordinarily, it’s too cold for it to bloom around here at all, except for maybe the six inches closest to the ground where the buds were insulated by snow from the frost all winter. Hopeful people plant it anyway, but I dug mine out for this reason years ago. This year, my house is missing out on the extraordinary spectacle of yellow fountains and fireworks in everybody’s yards everywhere, an abundance of glad yellow flowers making up for years and years when they never got to bloom at all.

  5. The neighbors have a pond in their field. I love the sounds of those peepers; Thanks for the post.

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