Thursday, 2 October 2014

Warm weather lifestyle


When I stop and think I have to envy myself the lifestyle I lead lately. It is now spring in full swing in Sydney and I still vividly remember spring in Poland which finished for me only three months ago. Maybe I do not envy as it is about myself I am thinking about but I should and I do feel grateful that I am able to live two springs a year. 

I am not a skier, hence I do not miss the cold weather, red nose, frozen hands and feet or snow in its slosh consistency. I can live very happily without it. Sure, there are some beautiful winter landscapes, there are times when snow is fresh and white making the world so quiet that you feel like wrapped up in cotton wool. Only if you think that in Poland winter lasts five to seven months and the beautiful white snow lasts maybe one or two days during the whole period you get less enthusiastic about living through the full four seasons.

This is a good version of Polish winter, but, boy, it was cold!


At the end of April the Northern Europe wakes up with colours and smells of spring. First come pussy willows as the symbol of future change in weather. You can get them in flower shops and they are also sold in streets by small entrepreneurs running their not fully legal small businesses at street corners.


My Polish favourite spring flower - lilac

Reminiscing I recall the time when walking though still a snowy park in Warsaw I was stopped by a reporter needing a spring picture for a newspaper. It was March, rather cold and I was wrapped up in a sheep coat. I was handed in a bunch of pussy willow branches, asked to smile,somebody took a picture of me, I got a nice thank you and the next day the 22nd or 23rd of March, the first day of spring I saw my picture on the first page of an equivalent to Sydney Morning Herald with the caption “Warsaw spring, still in a heavy coat but already with bunch of pussy willow branches”.  What glory days they were... I wish I kept the newspaper cutting.

                      And  

Coming back to reality and 2014 in Australia, I returned from Poland at the end of August and was able to welcome Australian spring on the 1st of September. I like the simplified way of starting seasons here. One does not have to remember if it should be  20ies, 21st, 22nd or 23rd of March. Astronomy does not practice simple solutions. This year 2014 Northern spring equinox was on March 20, but I had to check it to make such a statement. 

Travelling through Australia this year I saw spring at its best, the Southern Hemisphere style. Wattles, in my mind, are an Aussie symbol of spring and I saw many of them this year. The suburban streets of Sydney are lined with azaleas and my favourite wisterias.  Different flowers, different smells, different beauty. I am so lucky I can observe and enjoy both of the spring editions.


My Australian favourite spring flower - wattle

5 comments:

  1. The Indian seasons are structured around our agriculture cycles but centuries of colonialism have brought artificial vacation times to coincide with the summer, what was called Michaelmus and Christmas for the Brits. I am among those fighting for change in the school vacation times to get farm children attending school during off season instead of working on farms during times when the families need all hands to help.

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  2. I have been writing rather frivolously about seasons while you are pointing out that they have also profound meaning for children and their studies. I see now and believe that there are many serious implications related to seasons.

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  3. Hi AC. Don't allow Ramana to push you off track! While I suspect that Ramana's campaign is a good thing, its a bit like some of the things that I campaign for, that was a lovely post. Loved the top photo,

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    1. Hi Jim, Nice to see you taking issue with me!

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  4. Hi Jim. Nice to get a positive comment from you, thank you. I think I am on my track even if I see points of others.
    I like people who campaign for a good reason.

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