There is something magical about springtime in Pennsylvania. Like a curious intruder, the season tiptoes into the chilly state, taking time
to look around and become familiar with its surroundings. As the axis of the Earth
increases its tilt relative to the sun, the days get longer and the nights get
shorter.
The gentle, warm sunshine starts the musical, but familiar
melody of drip, drip, plop from the gutters and roofs as ice and snow melt.
Water races down driveways, streets, and hills and vales, swelling streams and
rivers which have a merry song of their own.
Along those frozen riverbanks, the skunk cabbage is one of
the first plants to thrive along with the red buds which take on a flaming glow
against the drab gray arms of leafless deciduous scrubs and trees. In yards and
flowerbeds, crocus peeps through a blanket of white, and on the south side of
buildings, daffodils and grape hyacinths poke through icy flowerbeds and unfurl
their yellow and purple blossom. And everywhere the air is clean and crisp,
smelling of new growth and rich loamy earth.
Spring is the time when some mammals are starting to mate.
If you listen carefully at night, you might hear a fox barking from the woods,
coyotes calling to each other, rabbits squealing in the bushes, or the haunting
hoots of the barn and horned owls. And every Pennsylvanian recognizes the
familiar and welcome sounds of the peepers in the wetlands just before
nightfall.
The actual migrating “snow birds” are back in the state
along with the locals. The chatter of the resident black-capped chickadees,
winter sparrows, and cardinals in the bushes becomes more insistent as they
call to their mates and hunt for the perfect place to build a nest while
warning others to stay out of their territories. Canada geese wing northward,
and soon the wrens and goldfinch will follow. Somewhere up in the pines the
first lean robins arrive to shiver and force out a tune while they search the
thawing yards for bare spots to find nourishment.
Spring is a kaleidoscope of vibrant colors. Winter brown
lawns fade into hypnotic greens and maples sprout lime-colored new leaves. Forsythia
bushes spill out showers of sunny-colored flowers along the roadways. High
above, bright blue skies tower over everything—except for the few minutes when
glorious sunrises and even more spectacular sunsets paint the sky in ruby reds,
golds and plum colors.
Spring is noisy, colorful, and magical in Pennsylvania. It’s
a long-awaited season which lifts and warms the heart and soul upon its arrival—especially
after a long, cold, and dreary winter.