Autumn’s arrived so suddenly her colorful blush upon leaves soon to fall amid ripened gourds lying in our small garden where strong trunks of brussels have begin small sprouts beneath giant leaves.
At my feeder, birds no longer nibble daintily, but gorge, filling for southbound flights rain beats against my roof in the now chilling air.
Where summer with its warmth? Tomatoes too late to ripen, remain green, bumble bees sit heavily on the few remaining flowers hoping for warmth’s returning beam, while honey bees finding my Cimicifuga racemosa’s white scented floral spray busily gather its last remaining nectar for their winter nests somewhere in my woods.
And I now out of my Bermuda shorts and colorful short sleeved shirts don long legged corduroys, an old sweater smelling slightly of moth ***** to begin the chore of gathering the garden furniture’s pillows, turning off the sprinkler putting away the hose.
It’s time to remove the two ultraviolet lamps from my ponds water pumps lest freezing break the bulbs. Koe fish, less interested now in my daily feeding rise to the surface in the cooling water more slowly as if preparing for sleep. I marvel at their ability to simply lie under the soon to be frozen water to await spring.
We humans don’t have such patience. We gather logs for our winter fires remove screens and windowed air conditioners check the furnace’s pilot light and search among the eves for boots and scarves and gloves. Autumn soon to be Winter