Monday, March 15, 2010

POSTSCRIPT TO YESTERDAY'S POSTING...

Over coffee at sunrise, we looked out at the muddy morning and reminded ourselves that, at this time last year, we kept a bucket of water and a good cleaning rag at the front door.
Each time before our big-footed dog could come in from the mud, we would have quite a time "de-mudding" him and his deep paws; and it seems we would still miss some of the mud.
We don't have that task anymore.
Too bad.
We still miss that dog.
R.A.T. (Rose About Town)


MORE ON DOGS AND THE SEASON OF MUD:
I enjoy sharing this note from a southern lady who obviously knows more than a little bit about dogs and the Season of Mud. She writes:

"Unfortuneately the Season of the Mud has crept this far south... I do not go out into the back yard with the dogs without putting on my hunting boots that are nearly waterproof. And we have multiple dogs that make the journey through the house every day to get from back yard to crates in the evening. YUCK! I'm waiting for the Season of Evaporation."

R.A.T. is happy to discover there are other people out there who know about those extra, unnamed seasons that sneak in among our four official seasons. Thanks, Susan!

R.A.T. accepts your comments at randrmoore@gmail.com

Sunday, March 14, 2010

THE SEASON OF THE MUD IS HERE...

In our Northeast Ohio, there are four official seasons; each has a name and each holds something to admire.

But Bob and I have lived here all our lives, and we have learned that there are unnamed seasons too, between the seasons and inside the seasons.

One of them is starting now, and we have named it "The Season of the Mud".

Its span is unpredictable; it does not respect the calendar. It may rear its gloomy head in the last few days of winter; or in the early spring; and its sloppy presence sometimes lingers with us until the end of April, and sometimes into May.

It's inhospitable to human work or play; a dull, damp time that's spare of inspiration, and often chilling to the bones.

Its a splat-splat time of melted snow and puddles where we don't expect to find them; and our lawns lie sparse and dormant, reluctant to recover from the months beneath the smothering snow.

It's a time when, with a sucking sound, our feet fight valiantly to keep from sinking into softened soil; and the paths into our woodlands become temporary bogs, unseen and treacherous beneath the layers of aged autumn leaves.

Bob and I do love the four official seasons here. But in this, The Season of the Mud, we are often sorely tempted to turn our wheels southward into Springtime...

And to return when Mother Nature has decided to dry up.