Friday, August 22, 2008

Seasonal swing

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey
         
A change is in the air. Summer is leaving us one day at a time. The air smells different. The sun’s arc is lower in the sky every day, making the light more mellow and not as harsh (and also not hitting the pool). The days are getting noticeably shorter. This seasonal swing seems early this year. We’ve been experiencing nighttime temperatures in the high 40s and low 50s. Nice sleeping weather but not good for keeping the pool at a reasonable swimming temperature. It seems like pool season just started and now it’s pretty much over. So sad. Don’t get me wrong—I love Fall—but this year I’m not quite ready to let go of Summer. A very odd thing for me to say since Summer is not my favorite season.

Fall is another truly wonderful season in the East. We get four true seasons, unlike Colorado where Spring and Fall amount to about two weeks of each. Here Fall lasts for months, spreading itself out like comfy blanket. I think you know what I mean.  Like when you go to spread a blanket for a picnic, and as you lift your arms high and release it, the folds billow out and fall gently to the ground. That’s what it’s like. A slow settling down. Okay, maybe I am ready after all.

One side of getting ready for cooler weather is to stock up on firewood. Especially this year with the sky-rocketing price of fuel oil (which we happen to use to heat our house), we plan on using the fireplaces more than ever.  As if (me) Fire Woman needs an excuse to build a fire. We had two cords delivered on Tuesday. At first moving all this wood looked like a monumental task.

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey

But once I got started it just moved along a little at a time with the help of my trusty wheelbarrow.

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey

I learned a long time ago the art of ricking up wood to make a nice rack. That knowledge has served me well over the years, especially at the cabin where we cut all our wood from our own property. However, there is a definite difference in the wood. In Colorado it was all soft pine and aspen wood, and unless the wood was still wet and not aged it was not very heavy. I could carry a good armload of, oh, say seven or eight pieces of wood at a time. That was the good part about it. The bad part was that being as soft and dry as it was, it burned very quickly.

“Put another log on the fire…”

Here we have hardwoods. Heavy even when it’s aged and dry. And, much slower burning. I am lucky to pick up one large piece to toss into the wheelbarrow—using both hands, I might add. No one-handed tossing going on here. A pretty good workout for those upper arms and back. Pushing a loaded wheelbarrow full of hardwood is not a task for the faint of heart either.  whew.

Heavy work gloves are a real necessity. Not only to protect the hands, but to avoid getting bitten by all the spiders that have taken up residence in a few short days. What’s that you say, you don’t want to help me? Bunch of wimps!

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey

Soon progress is made.

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey

As I worked in the cool, fresh air of early morning, I could hear squirrels rustling around in the tree tops, then the thud of pine cones and/or early acorns falling to the ground below. They too must feel the shift in seasons, as they busily prepare their stash for the chillier months ahead. They must chew it off and store it because the ground is strewn with scores of cores of spent cones.

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey

I like working with wood. The smell of the split wood is earthy and redolent of sap and, well, woody. It’s a honest, homey kind of job. I expected to be sore from my woody workout, but I’m not. I’ve done a little each day but there is still more to go. Since we won’t be here for the next few days and I really want to get the wood off of the grass so the grass doesn’t die on me, I’ve hired Luke to move it over to the gravel. The job of stacking will still be mine next week.

That’s why I love living where I am so much. This house. This small four acres of New Jersey countryside. It allows me to have a little bit of the cabin, yet I can have NYC and a cosmopolitan lifestyle when the mood suits. Country Girl : City Girl. The best of both worlds all rolled up into one. I think I’ll stay for awhile.

Lynne Robinson, Hewitt, New Jersey

P.S. Rereading this post I see that I veered off topic quite a bit. Oh well. The thoughts kept tumbling out of my head and onto the keyboard as I went along. Sometimes it happens that way. I’m not going to go back and edit it; it is what is is!

Comments:

Great post (as was the last one with the coyote, who I thought was gorgeous!)  I was reminded of a book of my mother’s titled, “Always Leave
The Woodpile Higher Than You Find It”.

I really enjoyed this post - Autumn is my favourite time of year.  I love the fall colours and the earthy early morning smell.  I don’t like the thought of going into winter with the cold dark nights tho.  We have just returned to Scotland after spending a few days in the Cotswolds where we had beautiful sunny and really quite warm days but the chestnut and beach trees were beginning to turn.

there is something reassuring about working with wood isn’t there?  we have to use smokeless fuel in london, in our open fire - but i do confess to putting the odd log on top, just now and then

Ps re your sleeping bee post, I remember hearing on a nature programme that if bees repeatedly return to the hive drunk, they can be turned out, or even killed.

!!

Sadly, my stacking ability fails in comparison to yours :0 Despite having one of the warmest summers on record, winter will be just as extreme.  Stronger nor’easters too. I finished piling the wood and sraps on the rocks Friday night so the grass should be recovering.
And daddy-long-legs don’t bite! Not me, at least.
Falls my favorite season too, probobly since I think it’s the nicest time of year here. Football starts, baseball post-season, basketball and even hockey starts.  What more could I ask for!?
Colored trees, we’ve gotta resume hiking those trails. It’s cooler now, too.
And jeeze that was an interesting tidbit on drunken bees, guess it’s taboo in the hive.
Love that first pic!

Beautiful post! What a life you have - pool in the summer, fireplace in winter, and wildlife all year round.

L’chaim!

Thank you all! Glad you enjoyed the post.

Reya, I know. I kind of like my life here!

Luke, great job of moving all that wood!

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