Back when I was younger and more energetic, before 2020, and still hurtling round the county in my car loaded with musical instruments, watching both the clock and the speedometer and desperately trying to get to the next school with enough time to park, unload, set up and pause for breath...
...back in those (mostly) happy and headlong days, I still had time to watch the seasons changing the hedgerows beside the country lanes.
The first daffodils always appeared in February at a particular junction where I would leave the main route, a narrow, twisty, treacherous, high-speed rat-run, for a smaller lane (still a narrow, twisty, and treacherous rat-run). I had time for a glimpse, 'they're here', and then eyes on the road again.
Today I saw signs that I might very well have the joy of February daffodils in my own garden
Tomorrow is a continuation of this idea;
The soul in paraphrase, the heart in pilgrimage
I've chosen the second movement of Bach's Double Violin Concerto; a loving conversation between the violins, sharing, agreeing and expanding the themes together.
Such lovely music choices this week, thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I'm enjoying looking through YouTube to find them.
DeleteThanks for your music clips. General busy-ness just now means that some weeks lately I experience music in Sunday service - and by taking a mini break and listening to your clips.
ReplyDeleteThat's very lovely to hear.
DeleteI'm glad that you're feeling better.
ReplyDeleteIt's funny how seasonal markers can make such a difference and lift the spirits. Here in Yorkshire, the school run was marked in March by a huge strip of daffodils on a verge next to some fields. Now that the school run is over, I very much miss it.
Your snowdrops look glorious.
The snowdrop are slowly spreading from the original handful of bulbs.
DeleteI can't wait to see the daffodils start to grow. They won't stand a chance until the snow is gone lol. There is one patch in the woods where I walk. They seem to grow everywhere. At some point, when the place was still part of the (yikes) Insane Asylum they planted them there.
ReplyDeleteI will refrain from quoting Wordsworth!!!
DeleteI love snowdrops and yours are so abundant and lovely. Sadly snowdrops do not like my soil and gradually disappear.
ReplyDeleteWould they grow in a pot, I wonder?
DeleteMy potatoes are hitting too. But slowly
ReplyDeleteMine don't appear to be in any hurry
DeleteI am longing for spring and more daffodils to open. we have some bordering our front garden. such a welcoming sight.
ReplyDeleteThey bring a lovely golden glow to the gardens and verges
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