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Good Variety of Trees Beneficial to Yard, Community
The first day of spring this year will fall on March 20, that
intriguing time when the sun is directly over the equator and all
parts of the earth receive 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of
darkness – the Vernal Equinox. Today as I write this, February
28, the temperature is above freezing bringing about some icy
cold puddles of melted snow along the edge of our driveway,
perfect "bathtubs" for the tree sparrows and juncos who
are merrily splashing away.
Judging by the large number of people who head for the South
or Southwest each March, which we have experienced a few times
ourselves, they obviously are anxious to get away from something
that does not meet their fancy. Muddy driveways may be one of
them, but there are also plenty of new happenings and arrivals
that help make the month very interesting in the North.
Checking over my last nine years of phenological records of
natural occurrences and arrivals, here are only a few of the
things we can expect this March: eastern phoebe, song sparrow,
sandhill crane, ring-billed gull, eastern bluebird, hooded
merganser, tundra swan, brown creeper, robin, red-winged
blackbird and woodcock. Pussy willows surely will decorate many
wet roadsides and swamps well before the end of the month, but
there have been a few extremely mild Marches in the past when we
also recorded he paticas and trailing arbutus wildflowers in
bloom.
Just to show you how fickle this month can be, here are some
of the March 15 entries in my nature journal. 1995 – we had
already left for Kearny, Nebraska to witness the sandhill crane
extravaganza along the Platte River. The temperature there on
the 14th, when we were already in our observation
blind an hour before sunrise, was a pleasant 41 degrees F. Our
guide told us that at least 20,000 sandhill cranes had spent the
night right outside the blind and we were there to witness their
pre-dawn chorus and awakening – awesome!
1996 – we had left a few days ago to visit Charlotte’s parents
in Phoenix, Arizona where we enjoyed shirtsleeve comfort on our
many walks and hikes.
1997 – We were literally buried beneath drifting snow, at
least 10 inches with another four to six being predicted. It
was 4 degrees above zero F. and very windy on the
15th, the wind-chill factor at 20 degrees below zero
F., a brutal winter day – good time to be in the South.
1998 – We awoke to a sunny dawn and 4 degrees above zero. It
snowed yesterday, the 14th. The bald eagles are
already re-claiming their old nesting site today at the Point.
1999 – It was calm today and the temperature got up to 30
degrees F. The varied thrush was still in our yard, its
83rd day, one of the most exciting winter resident
birds we’ve ever had in our lives. Tonight there were a few
cold-weather moths fluttering at our kitchen windows after dark,
as though they wanted to come in to warm up.
2000 – It got up to a balmy 46 degrees F. yesterday, the
14th. It was mild on the 15th and the good
news was that the bluebirds have returned to our field. A pair
of American kestrels was also seen near their nest box on the
south end of our property where they have nested for the past
several years.
2001 – The temperature at dawn was 28 degrees F. A high of 36
was reached this day and the snow is melting fast. However,
looking back to 1997, we are not putting our snow shovels away
yet. In fact we usually keep them out until May 1!
2002 – The temperature on the 13th was slightly
above freezing as we left early for Florida. One of the
highlights of our trip was to visit Callaway Gardens in western
Georgia and to see, among perhaps the world’s best display of
azaleas, the exceptionally wonderful Cecil B. Day Butterfly
House, one of the world's finest. I was able to take many good
colored slides of butterflies, some extreme close-ups, which were
added to our program, "Eye To Eye with the Butterfly."
What a shock we received upon our return to Door County from
Florida. It was snowing as we turned into our driveway at 1 p.m.
on the 28th of March!
2003 – Callaway Gardens in Georgia, and our friends in Florida
lured us back for another short vacation in the South. The day
before we left, the 8th of March, a light snow was
falling at 7 a.m. and the temperature was 18 degrees F. By late
afternoon there was 5 inches to be plowed off the driveway – a
mess. Plenty of dark-eyed juncos and tree sparrows were still
coming to our feeders that would be cared for by our friend while
we were gone. By the time we returned home on the 25th of March nearly all of the snow had melted and the first
chipmunk of the season was seen on the seed-laden ground beneath
the bird feeders. By the next morning, the 26th, the
temperature was down to 30 degrees F. and it was back to wearing
long johns!
March last year ended with the temperature at 20 degrees F. at
dawn. Two more inches of wet snow fell that day. Believe me,
there were no hepaticas in bloom in our woods before the end of
the month that year.
The magical word of the month for me is SPRING! Longfellow
once wrote: "If spring came but once in a century, instead
of once a year, or burst forth with the sound of an earthquake,
and not in silence, what a wonder and expectation there would be
in all hearts to behold the miraculous change."
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