Soaking up sunshine
Posted on | April 18, 2007 |
It felt like spring today, for the first time. The mercury climbed to the upper fifties, and the sky, this afternoon, looked like heaven’s housewife had hung all her downy comforters out to be tossed by a mischievous wind. The sun shone down with real heat.
I came home from work, threw on my black rubber boots, grabbed a yogurt and fled into the sunshine with Bean at my heels. DH followed suit soon after, carrying his signature pint glass of iced espresso, his muscles rippling divinely under the blue cotton of his t-shirt. Barely t-shirt weather, but I’m all for it.
We rambled haphazardly, following our marmalade streak of a cat, Bandit, down into the lower meadow where the apple trees grow, and where, in summer, the grass is waist high. Now it’s trampled and brown, and the apple trees have the tiniest of budlets just beginning to push from the ashy maroon bark. I ran back to get the pruning shears and with a sudden zest, we initiated the immense task of taming the mess of wild grape vines growing like kudzu between knobby, overgrown and half-dead branches of our many apple trees.
It was pure delight to be there with my two guys, cutting back dead wood, with apple sap on my fingers, while Bean chased the cat in widening orbits around us. DH pulled out the chain saw, and we made an afternoon of clearing fallen branches and logs from the edge of the woods—piling them in a bonfire heap. Then we lay down in the grass and watched the sky spin. Like looking up into the deep blue curvature of an enamel bowl, flecked with milk.
The robins are back, and their warbling became a forte trilling as the sun neared the edge of the woods. Bean couldn’t get enough of playing outdoors. All he wanted to do was run, twirl, climb, muck about, and I can’t blame him. The slow start to spring has had me antsy. I can barley imagine foliage. It feels like snowflakes have been permanently imprinted on my inner eye.
When it was dinner time we sat at the table bathed in sunlight, with the windows open, and ate an artichoke together, Bean on my lap. Our fingers were a mess of lemon-butter for dipping the tender parts. Bean shares my affection for this oddly sweet flower, and together we nibbled the heart right to the pithy thistle down, and then reluctantly sat back, licking our fingers.
A good day.
Also, I couldn’t resist snagging this little personality exercise from Le Petit Hiboux. I’m curious. What’s your take?
Comments
7 Responses to “Soaking up sunshine”
Leave a Reply
April 18th, 2007 @ 8:59 pm
what a divine day! i miss the having that level of activity in my day (not that I ever hacked away at kudzu…but walking to and from classes, taking the dog for a run, etc, was more than I do now).
April 18th, 2007 @ 9:39 pm
Mmmm…artichokes! My kids love them, too
And did you know if you grow them and let them flower they make the biggest purple thistle blooms? What a lovely day that sounded like. I wish it felt more like spring here…you can’t be THAT far away, so maybe it’s finally on it’s way. I can’t wait to see you, only 2 more days! 
April 18th, 2007 @ 10:34 pm
The pears in your photo remind me of a recipe I found in the newspaper today that you might like:
Pear Ginger Muffins: http://projects.washingtonpost.com/recipes/2007/04/18/pear-ginger-muffins/
April 19th, 2007 @ 8:59 am
Glad spring has found you at last:)
April 19th, 2007 @ 12:14 pm
Beautiful day and post!
Once again you’ve made me smile…and sigh:)
April 19th, 2007 @ 10:12 pm
What a wonderful description of a spring day. You have inspired me to spend more time on writing … now … if I could just remember where I left the time.
April 19th, 2007 @ 11:23 pm
OH! The line about heaven’s housewife…just perfect. I am so glad spring has finally arrived at your back door…hopefully she chases winter away with her spring cleaning broom!