The Wheel

Subtle summer messengers reveal a season slipping toward autumn

Dave Anderson | July 22, 2020
Tags:
Wildlife
Hammock suspended between two apple trees in late summer sunlight

"I notice the subtle changing angle of summer sunlight before mid-July..." Dave Anderson notes.

Something Wild is joint production of NH Audubon, The Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests & NHPR.

We recommend listening to it in its original format but a transcript of the show is also below.

You can hear Something Wild on NHPR every other Friday at 6:45 a.m. and 8:45 a.m., or subscribe to the Apple podcast here

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My annual mid-summer lament when weeks seem to accelerate is there are really only two seasons: "Summer Waxing" and "Summer Waning."  

The former happily runs from January to June. The latter opens — tragically — with the last dying echo of Fourth of July Fireworks and extends toward a darkening tunnel of autumn.

Most people don’t notice until “Back to School” sales pop up everywhere, or traditional end of summer Labor Day weekend picnics. I notice the subtle changing angle of summer sunlight before mid-July with an inherited Yankee gothic dose of “It could be worse,” and then, “probably will be soon.”   

Sunlight streaming through green frond of Christmas Fern as seen from beneath
Christmas Fern. (Photo: Dave Anderson)

By late July — with pre-dawn light glowing faintly in the east — the songbird chorus softens. The riotous May-to-June symphony of 20 bird species is dominated now by fewer than 10.. The most faithful, persistent singers: Cardinals, Robins, Wood thrush, Ovenbirds, and Common yellow-throat warblers and the endless phrasing of a red-eyed vireo. The songs now fade before 8 am (except the vireo); their lusty territorial-nesting impulses ebb like a summer romance.

Empty nesters, their fledglings now on-the-wing. In August, bright breeding plumage feathers molt to drab colors, fall travelling attire.

Raucous crows teach fledglings to herd grasshoppers across mowed fields. An elusive, wandering black-billed cuckoo calls in soft triplicate – Coo-coo-coo. They follow the emergence of hairy caterpillars. In mid-summer, brown apple and maple leaves – the work of hungry caterpillars — heralds the arrival of the cuckoos.

A bright green bullfrog perched at the garden pond at The Rocks in Bethlehem NH
Bullfrog. (Photo: Nigel Manley)

Next month brings flashing fireflies and fattening frogs. An increasing electrical buzz of insects — grasshoppers and crickets both morning and evening – becomes a ceaseless soundtrack of summer, like sand through an hourglass. The gas gauge seems suddenly startling at “half full.”

The daily dose of summer sunlight is stored in warm flat stones of the garden path and sunny stonewalls where garter snakes laze and bask.

Bright yellow blossoms of "Brown-eyed Susan" flowers
Brown-eyed Susan. (Photo: Dave Anderson)

Ditch weeds are flowering: Clover, Daisies, Brown-eyed Susans gone wild. Dusty plants await rain. Tree leaves ripple and show their pale underbellies in a stiffening breeze — with the promise — or hope — of what might be rain.

Do not resist a yawn and sigh at bedtime with sunlight fading by 8:30 pm on a midsummer evening: windows open, ceiling fan humming.

The annual “Perseids” meteor shower will peak overnight on August 11 and 12 with 60 to 100 meteors visible per hour. Go outside and lie on your back in the grass, your own backyard planetarium.

The shooting stars, belching frogs and dusty flowers are all blazing trails toward another approaching winter… 

We understand the undeniable metaphor of the seasons: spring is youth, summer, our most-productive sunshiny middle age, and how autumn represents the first gray hairs of senescence; a gradual descent into winter's little death. 

Red ripening McIntosh apples clustered on a branch
Apples in early autumn. (Photo: Dave Anderson)

Carpe diem, my friends. Go gather a bouquet of wild flowers for the dinner table, walk barefoot in the sand, and enjoy the intoxicating smell that pine needles make when they bake in the sun. Autumn will soon be here. Sooner than you may care to admit.

The wheels of time roll along the horizontal rails of the X-axis, even as questions without answers float like thunderclouds above our heads:

“What’s coming next?”

In a moment that feels so uncertain, we find solace in the knowledge that the wheel keeps spinning.  And although the days — little by little — grow shorter, we can find and appreciate the beauty in the here and now.