It was just three weeks ago that we entered the month of September, and I've only just gotten used to the idea that we are actually residing in that month. I am still startled to notice that schools are in session and that Tammy is now fully into the semester at the college. I am both dismayed and a bit alarmed that the sun comes up later each day and goes down sooner. There are tasks that I told myself should be easy to get done during the month that I have not even started and there are changes I promised I would make that are still promises - but not reality.
Three weeks. It doesn't seem like much time at all - yet it can be all the time in the world.
The first days of April this year brought snowfall to the Genuine Faux Farm. The big, fluffy flakes floated down from above and drew me outside with the camera to see if I could capture a pleasing image or two. Even if they weren't the nicest pictures in the world, they served as an excellent reminder of what was at that time.
There was a moment, as I stood outside and the flakes landed on my hands and head (well, hat actually), that time felt like it stopped. There was silence - except for the sound a snowflake makes when it lands.
But, then I blinked.
And three weeks had passed. There was no snow. The grass had greened. Some of the earliest plants were starting to show interest in waking and displaying their greenery.
The sun woke us up earlier each and every day - unless it was shy and hid behind the clouds. And, that same sun found more to see in our landscape, so it stuck around a bit longer into the evening - painting the sky as it finally admitted it had seen enough this time around.
Three weeks and the world had changed enough that a stranger might not recognize that they were in the same place that had existed just twenty-one days ago.
Three weeks is about how long it takes for a Barn Swallow chick to hatch and grow big enough for it to take its first flight. In three days more, it has likely left the nest for good. In three weeks, we can see the first German-bearded Iris bloom and, sometimes the last for the season. It's a special bloom season when we see them for four weeks. We often transplant lettuce seedlings we started in trays after a little more than three weeks.
Going back to our Barn Swallow friends, they are currently migrating, typically leaving our farm in September (we usually see the last of them on September 15, but many leave September 1st). They travel an average of 55 miles a day, so in three weeks they will have covered approximately 1,155 miles. That is approximately the distance from our farm to Galveston, Texas.
Three weeks. So little time - and so much. I can either allow myself to be upset that so much has changed, but I have not accomplished what I wanted OR I can be encouraged and I can think about what I will be able to do in the next three weeks.
Because a lot can change over that period of time.
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