As spring comes ’round again

There are flurries in the air, and everyone in the house has a bad cough, but I can feel the world outside shifting toward spring. I sugared off my first batch of syrup from the backyard maple, yielding a quart of medium amber. There are new green shoots in the wetlands, and daffodils pushing up through the frost. Red-winged blackbirds and mourning doves have started to return, and though we may have weeks yet of freezing nights, I will till my garden next month and plant my first cold-season crops by tax day. March is the dying lash of the dragon’s tail. It is the hollow cry of nesting owls and the sap that weeps from woodpecker holes. It is heavy wet snow and streams scoured by melt water. It awakens dormant salamanders with the first spring rain. It turns gravel roads to mud by day, only to freeze the ruts at night. It is a faithless lover, inconstant and unreliable as New England weather. Each cold snap and false spring only underscores that winter is losing its grip. We can see the light returning as day overtakes night. These monochrome days will soon have a fresh color palette, robin’s egg blue and trout lily yellow and the first flush of pale green leaves.March is the first mourning cloak butterfly, and the tattered remnants of last year’s leaves. It is the quiet acceptance of death and new life. It is a tethered kite, straining in a brisk wind. It is the urge to break free, like ice behind the dam. It is the window soon to be thrown open, the blankets shaken out and stored away. Spring has the upper hand, even now, even as icicles form on the roofline and the windshield still needs scraping in the cold light of dawn. It is all coming around again, sure as summer, and not even a muddy March can keep that wheel from turning.Tim Abbott is program director of Housatonic Valley Association’s Litchfield Hills Greenprint. His blog is at greensleeves.typepad.com.

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Classifieds - February 26, 2026

Classifieds - February 26, 2026

Help Wanted

PART-TIME CARE-GIVER NEEDED: possibly LIVE-IN. Bright private STUDIO on 10 acres. Queen Bed, En-Suite Bathroom, Kitchenette & Garage. SHARON 407-620-7777.

The Salisbury Association’s Land Trust seeks part-time Land Steward: Responsibilities include monitoring easements and preserves, filing monitoring reports, documenting and reporting violations or encroachments, and recruiting and supervising volunteer monitors. The Steward will also execute preserve and trail stewardship according to Management Plans and manage contractor activity. Up to 10 hours per week, compensation commensurate with experience. Further details and requirements are available on request. To apply: Send cover letter, resume, and references to info@salisburyassociation.org. The Salisbury Association is an equal opportunity employer.

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Photo provided by Wild Seed Project

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Free film screening and talk on end-of-life care
‘Come See Me in the Good Light’ is nominated for best documentary at this year’s Academy Awards.
Provided

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Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.