
The distance over the hills from Dixmont to the western mountains looks
measurable not just in miles, but in age. This place is ancient. You can almost see
through the undershadow into the past. Who prowled these woods, and where, and
for how long, before Europeans came and cut the firs?
The corn has peaked, but it's not that, and it's not that the apples are soon to be
ripe. But it's the air itself, the northwest wind sweeping out the shed and drying
firewood, as if a great door opened and pine and juniper scents have saturated the
atmosphere. This whole corner of creation feels clean.
It started early this year. On my trip to Quebec in mid-August I saw fields of
wall-to-wall goldenrod, and clots of orange and red leaves huddled in maples near
Jackman. But those were signs of fall - premature, and not what I'm talking about.
At the moment of late summer, winter is not yet closing in. Frost has not perched
itself in the garden, and the geese don't yet have the urge to fly off in the majestic
chevrons that ripple your blood. The wind is cool but doesn't bite. The sun is not
yet traitor-cold; it angles in just below July-height and heats the air. There's no
temptation yet to lock yourself in against winter and wait for spring.
Instead, this is what spring promised all along. What's here is now fully alive. The
air is transparent. It magnifies the black-green mountains one range beyond another.
Sunlight grapples with shadow patches on steel-blue lakes. Hay rolls diminish into
the distance in fields. Everything is deep. It's exactly what maturity looks like
before decline.
The most gorgeous weather on Earth is revealed here in late August. It's as if a
living being had descended, for just a month or so, and put the final polish on
everything. You could stay in Maine forever.
Amateur Naturalist
By Dana Wilde
In late summer comes the urge to stay in Maine forever
Even though I anticipate it all year, late summer
always surprises me.
You can see it coming by mid-July. Patches of
meadow grass redden and brown. Goldenrod sends
up the first ranks of its empire. Dusty-pink
steeplebush blossoms poke from bushes, and
purple loosestrife and Queen Anne's lace come up
in droves. Fireweed. Except for a few days of rain
and the odd thunderstorm, the air keeps a sultry,
summer-colored haze into August. Then, about the
time the dragonflies have cleared the yard of bugs
and my wife has unpacked her grade books to get
ready for school, it comes all at once, like the
wallop of God.
Suddenly the air is fantastically clear and cool. The
green of the woods blackens, as if night was
unfolding in the trees and bringing every needle
into relief.
Late summer in Troy, Maine, 2006
© Dana Wilde 2007
All text in these pages Copyright 2007 Dana Wilde.
Photos of Earth objects Copyright Dana Wilde and
Bonnie Woellner unless otherwise attributed.
Photos and graphics of outer space objects courtesy
of NASA unless otherwise attributed.
Contact: naturalist@dwildepress.net