Spring blooms

39005I found the first bloom of spring in my backyard yesterday.  Those of you in the upper Midwest know this has been a long and drawn out winter.  But we had a delightfully warm & sunny day yesterday, allowing me to clear the marsh grass from the garden beds and do some general cleanup.  It was a delight to find the tulip bulbs had emerged about an inch and half above the soil.  That was reason to celebrate.  But when I uncovered these beautiful little squill blooms I was delighted — our first glimpse of color since last fall.  These are tiny flowers, only about two inches tall, so I didn’t see them at first.  But for being so small they are certainly mighty; surviving the summer and bringing springtime joy and the promise of warmth and a renewed growing season!

Arrival of spring

38639I was out early this morning on a short run through my neighborhood.  Last week’s  cold and stillness of winter has been replaced by the activity and cacophony of spring.  My  breathing was accompanied by the songs of robins and cardinals and the tapping of a woodpecker, and my running was in synch with the scurrying of squirrels and the neighbors walking their dogs in the early light.   Everything comes to life with the promise of spring, including the blowing of white clothes freshened by the spring breeze and warmed in the heat of the sun on the clothesline.

Looking for spring

cineraria-primroses_staatsWinter still has its hold on us here in Minnesota.  We vacillate from cool to cold, cool to warm, and all the variations in-between.  We have snow, it thaws, it freezes, then thaws again, leaving us in the middle of “mud season” (as a good friend of mine calls it).  So when I get tired of winter and need a jolt of spring I go to the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory in Como Park.    The current Sunken Garden display is filled with cineraria, primrose, azalea, cyclamen, foxglove and lilies.  It’s a welcome visual and aromatic jolt to the winter-weary senses, and gives us the reassurance that spring can’t be too far away… maybe only another flip of the calendar page, from March to April???