February is the shortest month of the year, but for some reason, it often feels like the longest month of the calendar year. Here we are again, stuck in the dreary borderlands between winter and springtime, weary of cold and snow, longing for warmth and sunshine and longer days.
It is below freezing here for the most part, cold winter winds scouring the bare trees and making their branches sway and rattle and creak like old wooden sailing ships. Now and then, there are hints of springtime, but they are few and far between. This is the month when I think about installing a big rubber palm tree in the living room with a sun lamp, a load of beach sand and a deck chair.
Springtime is a puckish wight this far north, teasing us with hints of brighter, warmer times, then disappearing for several days at a time. After so many years of watching her antics, I am tolerant of her fickle conduct, her tricksy toing and froing. These late February days are liminal intervals with gifts of their own. They have a wonderful way of quieting our thoughts and breathing rhythms, of bringing our winter weary selves back to a still and reflective space in the heart of the living world.
I sat on a log in the woods a few days ago, watching as tattered scraps of birch bark fluttered back and forth in the wind. There were melted alcoves under the trees, and the morning felt like spring. The lines etched in the birches' paper were words written in a language I could almost understand when my breath slowed and my mind became still. The sun came and went, and when it slipped out from behind the clouds, its rays passed through the blowing strands and turned them golden and translucent, for all the world like elemental stained glass.
When I touched the old tree in greeting, my fingers came away with a dry springtime sweetness on them that lingered for hours. I tucked a thin folio of bark in the pocket of my parka and inhaled its fragrance all the way home. Some day soon, there will be spring in the eastern Ontario highlands, oh yes there will.






























