I waited and waited for my swallows to return this spring. Maybe Cappie gracing the beams in the barn beside the house didn't look like the welcome committee they imagined, because for the first year in over a decade, we're swallow-less. I'm really, really worried about this. We've had a hard spring so far, with a really big frost about 10 days ago that annihilated the asparagus and grapes. As it is, it's the end of May, and for the record, it was 8C this morning, and tonight, the wood stove is on. Things don't bode well for the swallow population with conditions like that.
Tessie's quite the character. The three cats have found their new places in the house sans Schatzie and Cooper. I call the new dynamic "BobCat and his Harem". The two girls provide Bob with just enough attention, and while the younger Capucine pounces on Tessie quite relentlessly some days, it's a very harmonious, easy-going sort of peace that reigns supreme. Tessie's our sensitive, independent one. Capucine's boisterous and pats me on the shoulder when she needs petting. And BobCat's staked Cooper's spot on the bed, and most mornings, I wake up to both Bob and the Cappers, staring at me from the foot-end of the bed.
Spring sprang suddenly, and at some point in April, we traded winter boots for sandals. We went from heating to using air-conditioning in the space of a week, but then things normalized. The heavy frost mid-May even frost-bit the tender ash leaves that had just begun to sprout. In 12 years here, it was the first time I can remember something like this happening.
Capucine is such a regal looking cat. Her personality is larger than life, and she loves being petted and fawned over, but only on her terms. She has so many little chirps and meows, and is very vocal.
It's hard to believe Tessie the scrawny stray became such a chunky girl. She has the nicest, fluffiest fur I've ever seen on a cat. It's funny how I'd never, ever had a tabby cat, and within a year, we find ourselves with two.
We've had a lot of rain in May. For the first time in a long time, the field across from the house is planted with wheat. I think it's been corn for the past 5 years, and if memory serves, it's been wheat only once in the last dozen. It seems to be the flavour of the year, since most fields in our area were planted with wheat this spring. The fields are now verdant and brimming with life.
And that's May, in a nutshell.