A beautiful spring evening in my St. Albans, Vermont back yard. Photo taken on May 5, 2023. Click on the image to make it bigger and easier to see. |
As far as composition and artistry and all that, the photo isn't much. But this time of year, I can't help just staring at it.
The colors! As we are in this especially drab, gray, relatively snow-free winter, you're going to want to click on the photo, make it bigger and stare lovingly into it.
The greens, with the speckled blue sky and the pops of yellow from the daffodils just bring such joy and, I don't know, ahhhh.
In three months or so, we will be free from this imprisonment of monotonous gray, brown, and dirty white. With any luck, by early May, our surroundings will look something like the photo in this post.
By the way, if you want more spring images to warm your heart, I've added a video to the bottom of this post.
Anyway, sure we had blue skies for a change on Sunday, which were extremely welcome. But by February, we all wait desperately for the color that true spring brings.
Click on the photo to make it bigger and easier to see. The late afternoon/early evening light and shadows in the photo bring out every possible shade of green. It helps that the tiny new leaves have that tender new born sort of bright baby green.
You can see that the lawn could stand a mowing, but that tall grass looks so luxurious. If I'm not mistaken, Jackson the Weather Dog that evening spent quite a bit of time rolling around in that grass. Which was a great idea. So I joined him.
Whether you admit it or not, you would have done the same.
Check out that sky. Sure, the beautiful blue skies on Sunday were a nice switch from the weeks of gloomy overcast we had, but Sunday's sky was still a cold, winter blue.
The springtime blue sky in the photo has a benevolent, warm feeling to it. The scattered clouds complete the painterly feel of the atmosphere. They also have a vaguely unstable look to them, as if promising some springtime showers.
You might guess from the photo that I like daffodils. Those pops of yellow just make me happy every spring. I have varieties that bloom early, mid-season and late to keep the show going.
My only regret is I only have about 600 or so daffodils planted on my property. I wish I had thousands. Worse, I ran out of time to plant additional ones this past autumn. Well, there's always next year.
I have lots of photos of my springtime gardens. My excuse for having the photos is it helps me plan improvements to the property.
But frankly, I spent an embarrassing amount of time in February looking at those photos as entertainment. Just to take my mind off winter. Even winters as mild as this one has been.
I know many people like winter. There's a lot of reasons why people would. But those green spring days and evenings are absolutely heavenly. If there is a heaven, I hope it looks something like what's in the photo.
Video: Spring images from 2023. Click on this link to view, or if you see the image below, click on that.
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