Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

~ Robert Frost

American Buckeye (Aesculus glabra) flowers with the characteristic long stamens.

It’s that time again.

Time for the most beautiful color imaginable:  the golden green of spring.  For me, it is the color of joy, the color of wonder.

The color of the world just waking up from a long sleep.

Looks like a squirrel silhouetted within the sun-kissed canopy, anxiously looking down at me. But it's actually a tumble of last year's dead leaves.

Of course, it’s also the color of impermanence.

If you don’t take the time out of your busy life to notice it now, before you know it you’ll have missed your chance.

That window is so brief, it astonishes me every year.  Several plants didn’t make it into this post — and all because I lifted the camera to my eye a little too slowly.

One of my favorite Japanese maples at the SC Botanical Garden.

On the other hand, I took so many pictures of this Japanese maple, admiring it from every angle, that a gardener at the South Carolina Botanical Garden came over to tell me where I might buy one for my own garden.

Some things, you must make time for, no matter what.

'Yugoslavian Red Butterhead' in a pot on the back porch.

Like spring salads.  Oh, they are delicious.  And I have a new favorite lettuce for beauty, ‘Yugoslavian Red Butterhead.’  None of the seeds came up in late winter and fall, and I was rather disappointed.  But they were only waiting until mid-January to germinate.  It seems they thrive in the cold.

Once again, everything has its season.

I am so grateful that the weather held cool for as long as it did, extending our harvests.  We even have a few spinach plants left, those grown in the lee of the house, protected from the midday sun.  It’s delightful to have fresh spinach in April.  Spinach, of course, is another one of those plants that whisper “impermanence,” at least in this climate.

Plant breeders work to hold onto that gold as long as possible, as they've done with this magnificent hosta.

Some of us just don’t want to let go when it’s time, though.  Well, I certainly don’t.  So I can understand the plant breeders who were determined to capture spring’s gold and bottle it up inside the tenderly veined foliage of this Hosta.

It’s not quite as poignant for me, though.  Somehow the color loses its power when I know it’s going to stick around all summer.  So… is that what gives this golden-green of spring its emotional punch?  It’s not merely a visual sensation, but the recognition of the inexorable passage of time.

It makes me more aware than ever of how much I want to join the dance, and how grateful I am to be a part of it whenever I do, how I know that I belong here, nestled in the heart of the amazing whirl of the natural cycle.

The truth is, I am always a part of it whether I surrender to the joy of it or resist it stubbornly every step of the way.  And I have done that recently, too, alternately dragging my feet and stomping them furiously.  Grief has its own cycle.

I guess that’s the thing with impermanence — and with life:  you get the whole deal, whether you like it or not.  Joy and wonder, birth and second chances, discovery and beauty, yes.  But also:  heartbreak and weeping, darkness and goodbye, mortality and the bitter cold.

Today the Earth is holding out her hand, and I am ready to dance again.

Closeup of Buckeye leaves unfurling from a branch.

That is worth more to me than all the gold in existence.

Namasté, y’all.

Witch hazel in bloom, early spring.

Witch hazel stem in bloom, close-up detail.

A patch of forest, showing deciduous trees in autumn.

Nature is, above all, profligate.  Don’t believe them when they tell you how economical and thrifty nature is, whose leaves return to the soil.  Wouldn’t it be cheaper to leave them on the tree in the first place?  This deciduous business alone is a radical scheme, the brainchild of a deranged manic-depressive with limitless capital.  Extravagance!  Nature will try anything once.

~Annie Dillard, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek

Just look at this red!

Only pure joy could have created that maple leaf’s color.  I’m convinced of it.

The oak below looks like the sunset nestled inside it during the long, hot evenings in August.  It just happens to be the tree at the crest of the slope, the one which receives the bulk of the last sunbeams as the sun disappears from our little hollow.

Maybe the oak and the sunset became friends this summer.  And I’m sure you all know how we take on the characteristics of our friends, even without meaning to.

Sometimes this is a very good thing.

Finally I’m able to really venture outside and participate again in this great passage the Earth is living.  It feels sacred to me, to be able to get right up close again, to breathe the exhalations of these trees who share this place with me.  It’s a time to easily get lost in wonder at all the color, all the light.

Dramatic change is everywhere you look — and yet it’s all being done with charming subtlety.  Outside my office window, a rich tapestry of ambers, golds, browns, buff, sienna & rust is being stitched, minute by minute, hour by hour.  The artist is taking such loving care with the details.  Not one thread is out of place.

I couldn’t capture the panorama, unfortunately.  It marches all the way down our lane, dipping into the hollow, bordered at the lane’s dead end by a magnificent oak turned to peach and gold, and each of my attempts inevitably revealed some personal detail, either ours or our neighbors’, like a street sign, car tag, mailbox.  You can’t be too careful with that kind of information lately.

But I did manage to get this vignette, a few square feet of the tapestry, situated directly across the road from our recycling bin.

Lovely; isn’t it?

My favorite experience of the autumn so far, though, was climbing the embankment to stand beneath the lovely tree below.  Time stopped as I was enveloped in beauty, peace, and warmth.

These leaves looked more lemon-colored to me than the resulting photos indicate.  Instead, in the shots they came out rather gold, as you can see below.  I suspect I perceived the foliage as brighter than it actually was because my heart, overflowing with joy, was emanating its own kind of light.

Hoping you’ve enjoyed the results of my first photo-shoot after the flu.  I certainly did.

Namasté, y’all.

p.s. Does anyone know the name of that last tree?  I definitely need my own tree identification book.  I’ve returned the one I’d been borrowing from my sister for quite some time (thanks, sis!), and now feel keenly the inadequacy of my arboreal education.  Meanwhile, it seemed a safe bet to turn to all my earth-loving, tree-hugging, nature-writing, and garden-blogging friends.  I’m just betting one of you knows or can put me on the right track!

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