Spring has finally arrived in Lexington. I know this because the insects have returned. Did you know? In places where there's winter, the insects mostly go away for the cold season. I understand that, if you live in a place where there's heat, like an apartment building, insects might still be active, staying like you where it's warm & crawling all over you at night. But my wife is very cheap so our house is pretty chilly during the frozen months, & insects find no safe haven here.
You might ask, as the folks at the Smithsonian have, where do insects go in the winter? If you did ask, like I did, there's a web page that tells you. It will teach you a word that I didn't know existed. That word is "overwinter." Not as in, "I am so over winter." Which I was. Snow in March? What the hell? No, "overwinter" means "to pass, spend, or survive the winter." The site has subheadings like "Overwintering As Eggs" & "Overwintering As Pupae" but an online dictionary uses the word for humans, as in "to overwinter on the Riveria."
I talked to someone in Minneapolis today & she said they're expecting snow there this week. Snow! In April! She said they don't expect spring until May. In Austin, spring gave the city two or three gloriously mild weeks usually in March, although during my time there I adamantly refused to turn on the air conditioner till May, with many sweaty April nights. The snow does not appear to be coming close to Kentucky, but it'll still drop temperatures at the end of the week to the 50s. (It was in the 80s today. Glorious!)
Yes, spring. People had their shirts off & were wearing shorts today where only a couple or three weeks ago there was snow on the ground. It has certainly changed my attitude. For example, I am no longer daily searching online for information about mental illnesses.
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