| It
rained yesterday. The clouds moved in with heavy portent from the
west in the late afternoon, and I hurried to complete the yard clean-up
I was doing. The first drops, the size of saucers, slapped against
my face and arms as I struggled with the latch on the new gate,
and I jumped every time thunder rolled through the sky, the lightening
coming closer and closer, but not yet dangerous.
I finally
left it and dashed inside just as the wind swept in, ripped a hole
in the tarp of the sky, and rain poured down as if a barrel had
been knocked over.
Poured.
And poured and poured. Lightening danced and thunder roared, and
the rain poured.
We
joke that our street is an arroyo, which is a ditch that forms on
the high desert to carry away water from storms like these, because
when it storms like this, water fills the street curb to curb, rushing
like a river over the blacktop, carrying with it tree branches and
rocks and whatever else falls into its current. People build elaborate
water breaks to deflect the river's force from their yards and lawns
and flowers. The instant the storms are over, children rush out
to wade until the river is once again spent.
I love
the quirkiness of this sometimes-river. I love to watch it. Love
to see what it carries, love the power of it, flowing so wildly
down the ordinary channel of an ordinary neighborhood street. It's
a part of summer, the late afternoon thunderstorms through June
and July, and the river that flows down my street.
Yesterday
was the first time I'd seen it in at least two years.
Last
summer, there was no rain. Not any. The clouds sometimes rolled
in, but the rain never fell all the way to the ground. It would
sometimes fall most of the way before evaporating, and the perfume
of it hanging in the air, tortured us all. Our noses quivered, our
faces lifted to the sky, but the rain never struck our hopeful flesh,
the dead-dry ground. Ranchers sold their cattle, unable to feed
them from the lifeless grasslands. Farmers turned their backs on
their withered fields. Fires burned and burned and burned, in the
grasslands, in the mountains, in the National Forests. Water restrictions
dried up lawns and people saved dishwater to pour on their roses.
I did, anyway. It's not strictly allowed (and not for the reasons
you might think--dirty water--but because once I have used the water
that flows out of my pipes, it no longer belongs to me, but to someone
else downriver), but I couldn't bear to see them die.
It
was terrible, I must tell you. There are those who say it was the
worst period of drought in the state's history. I believe it.
Somehow,
though, the circle of life seems to always turn again, and in the
early spring, it snowed sometimes. We were startled by it at first.
Rejoicing in the moisture, but distrustful. Through March and April,
though, the usual spring snows and rains blustered through. Denver
had its worst blizzard in its history, a snowstorm that packed as
much snow onto the mountains as had fallen over the past two years
in some places.
And
now, in June, the reservoirs are still not full enough, but the
land doesn't care how much water there is stored for city dwellers.
The land is rejoicing.
The
first sign was the lilacs. There are a lot of lilac bushes in Southern
Colorado. They like the strong sunny skies and cool nights, and
they've always been one of my favorite flowers. It's always pleasant
for the week or two every year that they're gracing the landscape
with their color and perfume.
This
year, the lilacs didn't just bloom, they exploded into such a profusion
of blossoms that the air was narcotic with the smell of them. We
walked around dazzled by them, commenting to one another at the
Monet-like bounty of them, our eyes starved for the sight of flowers,
blooming again.
And
the lilacs were only the beginning. In the cities, the roses came
next, and it was as if they were in competition with each other
to see which bush or vine could have the most staggering number
of flowers. One of mine, a delicately colored pinkish-white one,
had so many blooms I had to stake it, and it's not even a climber.
But
it's outside of the cities and the careful tending of human hopes
and hands where the celebration is most astonishing. The mountain
fields are alight with wildflowers--orange and blue and delicate
whites, a patchwork of color against the brilliance of emerald,
knee-deep grass and the blue of the mountains and the sparkling
freshness of that newly-washed sky.
Someone
told me, when I commented on the profusion of blossoms this spring,
that it wasn't the rain that made everything bloom so wildly. It
was the drought itself. The response of threatened plants is to
produce twice as many blossoms in the hopes of continuing the species.
It's a survival mechanism. If the drought had continued, at least
some of the flowers would have bloomed and been fertilized and sent
out seeds to lie on the dry ground until the rains came again.
Because
the rains came, every blossom had the chance to open and survive.
I sat
on my porch as the river flowed down my street, thinking about that,
the wonder of it. Thinking about the cycles of nature--drought,
fire, clearing, rest; then rain, nuturing, production--and how life
goes that way, too.
And
then I stepped off my porch, risking lightening for three seconds,
to let a full bucket of rain come down on my head, too. Though I
wouldn't alarm my neighbors by dancing, in my heart and soul, I
was. I held out my arms and lifted my face, and danced.
Til
next time....
Barbara
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