Monday, December 7, 2009

Sudden Seasonal Change


This snow that fell three days ago is still with us.   Today the temperature remained below freezing again.   Ice that forms on the ponds now stays all day.   Geese rise from the fields, quickly form their energy efficient wedge and head south.   These signs all point to winter.   The suddenness of the change is startling.  One day before this snowfall I was working in the garden soil.   An ice crust would form overnight but by 10 am it softened.   Now the ground is frozen solid.  A robin was seen here on my last day of garden work.  Why it was still here and what happened to it with the change in the weather are not known.

Our monthly electric bill shows the average daily temperature for the past month and the same month one year ago.  44 degrees F for November 09 and 37 degrees F for November 08 appeared on the bill. An average daily temperature difference of 7 degrees F is quite a change.   The extra days of warmth sufficient for outside work were pleasant, but now it seems that winter is here.   Chrysanthemums need to be covered with coarse mulch now.  Their dried stems cut and placed over the new growth will be supplemented with some buckwheat straw.  A covering that is light enough to avoid moisture rot, but thick enough to insulate from severe cold is the goal.

The cold temperatures that make for aching hands last longer in the morning and return more quickly in the afternoon.  By 4:30 it is nearly dark and still the days are getting shorter.   But a few gardening hours in the middle of the day are better than nothing.

3 comments:

Kathy said...

Wow, what a transformation. I love your header photo - your garden looks beautiful even under the snow. I really admire good structure. It is so important in the North. We just had our first snowfall. It is milder along the river - until it freezes. Then winter really settles in. I learned from Cornell that many Robins overwinter in this area - unbelievably! - after I saw four of them in February in a local park here. They sustain themselves with fruits.

patty craft said...

We got a dusting of snow the other day that threw our city (Cincinnati) into a standstill. As if it never snows here! Tonight we're being deluged by rain; thinking happy thoughts that a) it's not snow, and b) the bulbs I planted will be happy

wiseacre said...

I missed the snow. I'm down on Long Island and the closest I've been to winter is a couple of days of frozen gound. I almost have to laugh, the media makes it sound like it's so cold down here that it's dangerous to go outside. They should spend some time with me north of the Adirondacks :)