« Jots: Tuesday 22 August 06 | Main | Digital Dalliance »

In Praise of August

...from Slow Road Home ~ A Blue Ridge Book of Days

It is August at last. True, there may not yet be much difference in day or nighttime temperatures to say we've moved into a new season. But here in the mountains, we can typically expect a tantalizing preview of fall during the first half of this month. There are signs of it already, if you know what to look for.

Many of autumn's wildflowers have emerged, though they are small and inconspicuous and most haven't blossomed yet. It will be another few weeks before you'll notice them as you drive along the back roads. But it is part of the pattern of things that the goldenrod, Joe Pye weed, and ironweed will become the dominant vegetation soon, adding rich deep yellow, dusky mauve and royal purple to the palette of color in every meadow and pasture border.

Soon, the starlings will grow restless. They'll congregate nervously in a few trees here and there, as if both attracted and repulsed by each other in a mob of squawking voices. Not one among them knows where they are headed or why--only that something big is about to happen. The instinct to migrate must be a powerful itch.

It won't be long before an occasional Monarch butterfly shows up on Goose Creek, passing by in loops and glides. In ones and twos, they will lift on the rising heat, winged wisps of will, bound at first in no particular direction and free of hurry. Then, later in the month and unfailingly west, they will glide resolutely toward winter roosts in central Mexico-a pilgrimage in such numbers that their combined weight will break the branches out of their roosting trees.

We should be looking for woolybear caterpillars to turn up in the next week or two. They'll be crossing the roads of Floyd County in large numbers in their brown and black three piece suits. I've given up trying to divine the harshness of winter from the ratio of the wooly worm's two colors. The message I carry away from their thick furry wool is simply that it will be more or less cold by and by. A thick black and brown coat like theirs will come in mighty handy then, though it's hard to imagine that in August's heat.

This month, the locusts and walnuts, last to put on their spring leaves, will be first to take them off. Harbingers of fall, the feather-pinnate leaves of sumac will be among the first to go orange along the wooded roadsides, followed soon by Virginia creeper's five-fingered leaves that carry red up the trunks of trees along the edges of our woods. Both these chameleon color changes will happen well ahead of the colors will appear higher overhead later on in the poplars, hickories and maples.

Some of the fallness that I will feel this week or next has nothing to do with changes in the visible signs of fall. It will come perhaps from an imperceptible sense of the loss of mere moments each day. Like our inner alarms that awaken us promptly every morning, my seasonal alarm sounds the call of fall this week. I'm confident that if you blindfolded me, spun me around ten times, and placed me anywhere on the calendar, I could tell you "this is early August" by the feel of it alone. But then, there are also the smells of the coming season in the air that give us clues.

On such a day as this in early autumn, I breathe in the new aromas that August alone can give--the scent of sweet clover and hay, of corn stalks going but not quite gone by--a potpourri of plant matter in profusion, baked dry by the summer sun. The aromas of monarda and pennyroyal, spicebush and sassafras were overpowered by the sweet smell of pasture pollen in mid July, but not so in August as the pasture winds down. I will be sniffing out faint traces of fall today and will stop often in the garden for deep drafts of autumn-flavored air.

This week, or the next, I will look up and declare "that is a fall sky!" when round piled and billowed clouds of summer for a day or two give way to clouds streaked and smeared, thin, high and pulled thin with the ends turned up, against a turquoise sky.

Fall will make a few short sorties in August, then retreat, and return again to stay longer each visit. "To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under Heaven." It is time for fall, even though the season has not yet quite arrived.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.fragmentsfromfloyd.com/scripts/mt-tb.cgi/2540

Comments

Well-written! I've seen a few of those things as well, and the coolish nights really aren't helping reduce the desire to chase the evening with pumpkin soup. Cutting the grass last week was interesting, as the first tulip poplar leaves had begun to fall (as they always do in Richmond just before school starts).

Only a naturalist could see the coming of fall in an August morning.

Very nicely-written essay.

Have you read Hal Borland? He is one of my favorites and your writing reminds me very much of his. You both share an easy and evocative way of speaking (and teaching) about the natural world and its rhythms.

Thank you for this.....despite the pleasures of fall, I've always felt a bit sad as we head towards a blue ridge winter. Your words have adjusted my viewpoint considerably.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)