from Google Images
What?
Global warming, you say? Sigh. It certainly seems so. Or perhaps I have a short
memory for temps during the past summers.
Except
one: 1980. It was excruciatingly hot. Especially in a small, frame, rent house
on a hill in Bryant. Central heat and air? You gotta be kidding. No wonder I
looked for a house to buy. (Don’t ask.)
On the day last week I typed this, the temp climbed higher—to 97.7 with a
“feels-like” temp of 111. And on the 3rd day of summer! My
three window ACs in the front of the house labored. The one in the living
room put out enough water for a nice-sized herd of cattle. Thankfully, though,
only two cats drank from it. The flower beds and porch plants got the rest. Oh,
and the five chickens I’m babysitting, uh, hen-sitting.
Speaking
of summer’s heat, a friend/ colleague who lives close to Tucson said it was 100
degrees after 9 p.m. out there. And, that June was the hottest summer month.
I’d never heard that. Had you? I figured it got hotter as the summer
progressed. Hmm. What is that “lucky old sun” doing up there? “With nothing to
do, but josh with those peasants down there.” (Apologies to Haven Gillespie for
the parody.)
One
more item, then I’m through harping about summer. From a poem, “Dozing on the
Porch with an Oriental Lap-rug,” by Richard Tillingast, 1969, are these three
lines:
“…it is four in the afternoon
a cold June so far
cold enough for a
fire . . .”
(from an anthology, The
Wesleyan Tradition of American Poetry: Four Decades,” p 100.)
July
4: the day on which former presidents Thomas Jefferson and John Adams and James
Monroe died. Stephen Foster, popular song writer, was born the day Adams and
Jefferson died, and George M. Cohan claimed July 4, 1878, as his birth date,
which was actually July 3. (from The
Trivia Encyclopedia by Fred L. Worth,
p. 134.)
“O
beautiful for spacious skies, / For amber waves of grain, / For purple mountain
majesties/ Above the fruited plain! / America! America! / God shed His grace on
thee, / And crown thy good with brotherhood/ From sea to shining sea!” – written
in 1893 by Katherine Lee Bates (1859-1929: Educator and poet).
May
your July 4th celebrations be full of deep appreciation of what
blessings and possibilities we have available in America.
3 comments:
Good post. People make 'global warming' jokes when we have a big snow storm in March. Head in the sand about 'climate change', extreme changes on each end of the spectrum. Oh well, by the time the North Pole melts, I'll be in heaven, looking down and saying, 'told ya'!
Oh how I remember 1980. It was the year I graduated high school, and even more memorable, the year our entire crop burned up in the field.
I remember 1980! We lost an oak tree that summer. Grieved over that tree.
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