17 March 2017, early afternoon
Low forties, overcast, slight breeze
The ground is a muddy, soppy crumble of eager green grass and patches of spring snow. This week's promised blizzard, up to six inches, ended up only a skirt of snow, and now most of it has melted into the saturated earth. I wander carefully up the hill in Mellon Park, testing the feel of the ground beneath my poorly-treaded boots. Sitting down on the hill's crest, like I usually do, isn't an option, unless I want soaked jeans, and I imagine even the wood chips surrounding the park's trees are soggy and damp. So I meander west, spotting a vacant bench above an asphalt path.
"Nanette L. Gordon," the bench's plaque reads, "Raised her family in this park 1928-2016."
I sit down on Nanette's bench, wondering how much this place has changed since 1928. The hill sloping down to the path is the same muddy turf as the rest of the park, but here draping green fingers of daffodils spear up through the tufted grass and rounded blankets of wet snow. Closer to the path, pockets of slumping, bright yellow flowers glow against the gray afternoon. I'm reminded of glacier lilies back in Montana, spring's first flowers popping bright yellow against snowfields trickling sweet meltwater through gravelly soils of granite, quartz, and fool's gold. For fear of giardia, I never drink straight from mountain streams except for places like these—clear, sharp rivulets of the purest tasting water I've ever had, shared by blooming glacier lilies. Soon shooting stars join them, and yellow bells, and buttercups, flares of color against a landscape still dominated by winter's white.
I've been thinking a lot about risk lately, in writing and in life, and these hunched but verdant daffodils remind me of that sharp-edged contemplation. In forth and fifth grade my teacher taught us the phrase Carpe diem, "seize the day" in Latin, and those words have stuck with me ever since, a foundation of thought before yolo ever worked its way into modern lexicon. Carpe diem, I think, staring at the daffodils still edged against snow, risking their paper-thin petals against ripping wind and starry-skied frost for the chance to bloom first, to stretch pale roots into sodden earth among knifes of ice. So why not stretch green leaves through snow to shine sharp yellow against that snow?
I know that this gust of cold, snowy weather across the eastern United States has frozen fruit trees' buds, cutting out a season's crops even before the season began. Anthropogenic climate change means spring is inching ever closer to the new year for many parts of the world, but unpredictable weather means these cold systems still bluster through and shred flower buds and crops. Now carpe diem is each day, every day seized by an unpredictability, a snowball of conditions we cannot control but somehow still catalyze.
Daffodils in Pittsburgh, snowfields in Montana, all suddenly immediate and terrifying. Glacier lilies, as their name alludes, prefer glaciers as well as snowfields, and glaciers in places like Glacier National Park are expected to disappear by 2030, and those in the Beartooth Mountains and elsewhere in the state likely not much longer. Pittsburgh, I've found, is on the fringe of north and south, sixty-five in January and then back in the teens two weeks later, a wild mismatch of data points on a graph. The daffodils, too, are on the fringe of snow, of winter, of a white unpredictability borne from a known yet still debated and doubted source.
I'd like to live like the daffodils, like glacier lilies and shooting stars and trees blooming in spite of it all. Dig in my feet to mud and grit and sopping snow and yell bright yellow into the tumultuous air, that here we are, cold and bright, stooped but growing, windblown and seizing every moment for its sunshine and sweet, clear rain.
I enjoyed the immediate alliteration. It helped your piece to develop a sense of movement and flow that I envisioned matched the breeze you felt. I also enjoyed how you compared the park today (2016) to what it could have been in the past (1928). Similarly, you compared Montana today (2016) to what it might be/will be in the future (2060). You then compared Pittsburgh and Montana, giving us a great and highly detailed picture of spring in both places, as if we were in these two places with you right now.
ReplyDeleteSarah- I truly loved all of your fresh descriptions of the convergence of winter and spring, the comparison of Pittsburgh's daffodils to Montana's glacier lilies. How wise to connect this all to a changing climate and the courageous adage, "Carpe Diem," seizing the day regardless of the outcome. For often we don't know what magical thing might happen if we poke our yellow heads out on a winter day.
ReplyDeleteThe language in this, from the first line and its engaging imagery, is stunning. Like in your other entries, this one does a wonderful job of thematically considering the larger implications of our human impact on the environment, while weaving seamlessly between evocations of two meaningful places. The lyricism balances out the seriousness and the meditation so effectively.
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