Two ‘Miragreen’ garden peas in the bottom of their planting hole.

Wednesday morning, as I washed my kitchen windows, I felt the warmth of the sun on my left shoulder.  It was not that anemic light I’ve grown accustomed to over the winter months, but the rays had persistence and strength — even weight, as if the sun were laying a gentle hand on me.  But of course, this particular hand has an incomparable touch, comprised of equal parts youth, generosity, new love, and giddy delight.

Later that afternoon when my sister had joined me, she suddenly stood up from where she’d been bent over sprinkling pea inoculant down a freshly prepared row.  Her brow was furrowed as though she were thinking Big Thoughts.

“What?” I said, seeing the look.  I continued to hoe up stubborn winter weeds that had taken hold in the nearby pathway.

“The sun,” she said slowly, and paused, squinting up at the sky.

“I know,” I said immediately, excited that someone else had noticed it, felt its subtle weight.

But that wasn’t what she’d noticed.  Not exactly.

“It’s yellow,” she said.  “The winter white is fading out of it.”

I had to smile.  My sister, the visual artist, had noticed the fine seasonal gradations of the sunlight’s color, whereas I was focused on the feeling of it striking my skin.  There is nothing new about this pattern at all.  We may have been playing the same variations on a theme since childhood, actually.

Still, it was good to get confirmation that the change was real, not just wishful thinking on my part.

But just in case we got any ideas that this newborn, slightly more golden sunlight was here to stay, two reminders of its inconstancy arrived in quick succession.  One came in the person of our friendly UPS delivery man walking around the side of the house to find us (voices carry in our little, secluded hollow).  When he saw my sister kneeling in the mulch and me up to my wrists in dirt, he laughed and said that we shouldn’t allow ourselves to be so easily “tricked” into believing spring was here.

What he didn’t realize, however, is that I am ready and willing to be misled if it will result in another glorious day like that so early in the growing season.

And the other began yesterday evening and is continuing this morning:  flash-flood inducing rains.

Remember how a river ran through it?  The river is back in full force, its rippling current carrying away the soil, compost, and four inches of heavy mulch that I’d put down to try and hold the land in place, sweeping away even F.’s careful attempt at a retaining wall at the lower end.

Garlic bulbs lie exposed on the surface of the bed, stark white dots on the banks of the ever-widening stream seen clearly from the newly-cleaned kitchen window.  And I’d just said on our sunny day out how proud of them I was, how quickly they’d recovered from their trauma and put out new green shoots.

Sigh.  I do feel in need of a sunny pat on the shoulder when I see the ongoing destruction, part deux.

When I was walking in the SC Botanical Gardens last week, a catbird came and landed in a Beautyberry shrub just beside me on the path.  I stood stock still, unable to believe my luck.  But then, being me, I couldn’t actually stay that way very long.  Instead, I fell back on my tried and true method for interacting with nature:  just be yourself.

“Hello there,” I said brightly to the bird, who was by now gorging himself on winter’s leftovers, shriveled, purple, Beautyberry berries.*  “Did you want to have your portrait taken?”

Mr. Catbird** cocked his head at me as if considering my proposal, but somehow didn’t startle at being verbally addressed by a human being only a few feet away.

Taking this as encouragement, I began to fumble for my camera while staring him directly in the eye.  “We’re actually having a promotional special today, “I added, “a free photo session for all birds friendly enough to stop by this bush.”

He actually hopped a little closer.  I raised the camera slowly into range.

And that’s when everything went wrong.***  He flew gently onto the branch closest to me and looked up at me patiently, so close I could have stroked his feathered head — at which point I completely lost my own.  I was so surprised that I snapped photos without even adjusting the range, with just the barest glance at the screen.

My eyes were all for him as he daintily nibbled another bright berry, tilting to watch my face the whole time, and the pictures I took show it plainly.  I was definitely woman-interacting-with-bird and not would-be-nature-photographer.  (Real nature photographers truly deserve our respect.)

The second he flew to another branch, much farther away, I snapped out of my trance and got a decent shot of his backside.  Classic.

But hey, we shared a little moment, and that’s worth more than a photo to me.

Mr. Catbird’s portrait session is brought to you today by the beginnings of a cold or flu which also caught me by surprise and curtailed my plans to plant**** peas and mustard today.  Instead, I sat in a super hot bath simulating a fever to try and get rid of the bug before it goes farther.  Not very garden-related… although I did take a delightful seed catalog with me for comfort, and I plan to read a garden-related novel while I rest this afternoon.

With luck, this will be the second time I beat back a cold-like tendril of an illness this season, not allowing it to take hold.  I have learned that it is much better for me to just drop everything and focus on getting better immediately upon noticing symptoms than to do what I did formerly, i.e. just ignore it and hope it goes away — and end up still dealing with lingering unpleasantness weeks later.

Just a quick note for those of you keeping track of my year of Focus.  The photograph for week four is ready, but I didn’t feel remotely up to writing the accompanying post. (I suspect you’ll understand why once you read it.)  That post will come tomorrow, or if need be later in the week.

Namasté, y’all!

* Yes, this is actually correct.  You can look it up.

** No, I don’t know if it was a Mr. Catbird or a Ms.  I don’t even know the proper species name for “catbird,” or if the bird in question has a more fitting common name.  That is what my Dad always called these birds, and I’ve never had the pleasure of a genuine interaction with one before.  You can be sure I plan to educate myself soon.  And feel free to enlighten me with whatever you already know in the comments section.

*** Not really.  Everything actually went just right… albeit not as expected.

**** Oh, well, those who garden by the moon say we are “moon in Virgo,” a barren yet moist period when planting is not advised.  So maybe it’ll all work out for the best.

[Update 2/2/10:  That was not a catbird that I saw.  According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (love that place), this is a Catbird.  Commonly confused with the catbird -- and I'll have to tell my Dad -- is the Northern Mockingbird.  Luckily, I never called my friend by name, so he did not get offended by my mistake.  A particular sentence in the Cornell Lab's description made me laugh:  "The Northern Mockingbird enjoys making its presence known."  Indeed.]

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