Jim and I have enjoyed pointing out "popcorn trees" to each other every time I drive. I feel like there are more this year than the two previous years (probably thanks to a milder winter), and that the colors are more vivid. I've always loved dogwoods and magnolias, but this year has also offered a pretty vibrant selection of magenta blossoms (wish I knew the type of trees!).
It's been a cooler spring, at least lately, so I haven't gone on many walks, and it feels unsafe/silly to take pictures while driving, so I don't have tons of pictures. Hopefully that will change before the blossoms all disappear. This time of year just goes too quickly.
I've been obsessed with spring for a good chunk of my life, which naturally means I wrote a bit of poetry about it as a teenager.
Except . . . this might be the least poetic synopsis of spring that has ever been penned. It's hard to mix flowery language with scientific descriptions. Oh well. I tried.
It's been a cooler spring, at least lately, so I haven't gone on many walks, and it feels unsafe/silly to take pictures while driving, so I don't have tons of pictures. Hopefully that will change before the blossoms all disappear. This time of year just goes too quickly.
I've been obsessed with spring for a good chunk of my life, which naturally means I wrote a bit of poetry about it as a teenager.
Except . . . this might be the least poetic synopsis of spring that has ever been penned. It's hard to mix flowery language with scientific descriptions. Oh well. I tried.
I love pink trees
And green grass.
They do good for the soul.
So do blue skies
And white trees.
The cones in the retina
Must send endorphins to
The brain
When we see pretty colors
That make us feel good.
Or maybe there's a chemical
reaction because of the
carbon hybridizations in blossoms
That also send endorphins
That make us feel good.
Or maybe spring is just
a natural mood lifter.
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