seasons: summer and its surroundings

These are the seasons that I’m thinking of with longing…

Pre-Summer – as I said in my previous post, I’m not sure of the exact boundary of Warm Spring and Pre-Summer, but it’s basically June and the beginning of July. There will be days like summer, sunny and 70s, but also quite a bit of cooler (high 50s, low 60s) and even rainy weather. The neologism “Juneuary” may be used to describe the cooler stretches.

True Summer – starts usually the week after Independence Day and lasts until sometime around Labor Day. This is the most amazing season. Almost no rain, ever, and hardly a cloud in the sky. Occasionally gets up above 90, but usually sticks in the upper 70s and low 80s.

Dry Fall – summer fades down into this last of the bright seasons, starting around Labor Day and lasting until the rains show up: sometimes early October, but occasionally as late as Halloween. The evenings cool down quite a bit, possibly even with a first freeze, while the days remain somewhat warm: mid60s, and it can get as hot as summer. Dramatic clouds. A little bit of rain, but not much. (For me, the start of Dry Fall actually starts with a bit of rain in late August or early September, but then afterwards it gets nice again.)

And then the seasons start over again!

One of these days I’ll compile all of this into a single something or another….

seasons: springs

As I muse over the distinction between Cold Spring and Warm Spring, I’m realizing that it’s been long enough that I’m not entirely sure of the difference — plus the last time those seasons came around I hadn’t really started on this little conceptual project. So I imagine I’ll want to do some revising in a few months! That said…

Cold Spring — March and April, warmer than Wet Winter, and now is when things start growing. For me in recent years, it’s when I first get going on the bike again, although I don’t know if that will be the case this year. Another season when day and night temperature are often less than 10 degrees apart. Plenty of rain, interspersed with some early nice days. Frost is rare but not impossible.

Warm Spring — May, basically. No more chance of frost, and the first days in the 60s. Can be very erratic…

As I write, I’m also wondering about the distinction between Warm Spring and Pre-Summer. I know all of these distinctions exist, but where the boundaries between all the other seasons are pretty clear in my head, these ones not so much.

(Another grouping: the Springs (Cold, Warm, Pre-Summer); the Summers (True Summer and Dry Fall), and the Winters (Wet Fall, Icy Winter, Wet Winter). Which is funny, because one of the things that I was excited about in moving from Southern California was getting actual fall, and this grouping drops Fall entirely.)

Maybe I’ll come back to this set later, and in my next post write about True Summer and Dry Fall. (The most wonderful time of the year!)

seasons: SAD

It occurred to me after writing the previous post that one could also split my longer list of seasons into just two. For many years I’ve mentally split the year into the dark and light halves, to be clever one could call them the SAD (seasonal affective disorder) and bright seasons.

SAD: Wet Fall, Icy Winter, Wet Winter, Cold Spring

Bright: Warm Spring, Pre-Summer, True Summer, Dry Fall

It’s interesting that even though the days of Cold Spring are the same or even slightly longer than Dry Fall, I’d still group it with the SAD seasons over the Bright ones. Something about the amount of cloud cover, I think.

seasons: cold and wet

I’ve been continuing to think about my mental map of the seasons.

Wet Fall — usually starts at the beginning of November, but can start as early as mid-October or as late as mid-November. Lasts definitely through November and well into December. Daytime temps start in the mid50s and gradually decline to the mid40s. Rain. And if not rain, then overcast. These are the days for which the region is famous. Occasional overnight freezing, but for the most part the temperature is remarkably constant, drops less than 10 degrees overnight. Most likely dramatic weather is the Pineapple Express — warmer wet weather that comes from the tropics, often with wind, usually with flooding.

Icy Winter — usually starts mid-December; if there’s a “real” snow in December, that’s the start. Otherwise, right around the solstice. Lasts through January, occasionally into early February. Daytime temps range from mid30s to low40s, with most overnights right around freezing, but can be quite a bit colder. A stretch of overnights in the low 20s and daytimes right around freezing isn’t uncommon. If we get any noticeable snow, it’s during this season. Can have stretches of very bright clear days, which are almost always also very cold. This weather often comes with freezing fog.

Wet Winter — usually starts after the last chance of “real” snow at the beginning of February, and lasts through the last stretch of really cold weather in mid-March. This looks a lot like Wet Fall, but less dark only because the days are longer. Gradually warms up out of the 30s and up into the low 50s. Almost always includes a “fake out” day that feels like spring, usually in mid-February. There WILL be a frost after that date.

This is mostly based on my personal experience, so it’s really only good for Olympia and Tacoma. YMMV in other parts of the Pacific NW.

seasons

I’ve been working on this idea for a local season calendar for maybe a year or two now, musing on it in the back of my head:

Dry Fall (Sept-Oct)
Wet Fall (Nov-early Dec)
Icy Winter (late Dec-Jan)
Wet Winter (Feb – early Mar)
Cold Spring (late Mar – Apr)
Warm Spring (May – early June)
Pre-Summer (late June-early July)
True Summer (late July – August)

I think it captures some of the nuances that people miss and forget around here. (Like the fact that we’ve gotten quite a bit of sun lately, and it’s not really that unusual. Icy Winter often features very cold sunny days.)

One of these days I’ll get around to elaborating on it some more.

hair: reactions, being weird

“Were you freaked out when it was gone?” (Or variations of that) – since I’d been thinking about it for weeks beforehand, and since it had been driving me nuts for most of that time, not really. The sensation, when she made that first cut & suddenly I had a chin-length bob, was mostly one of relief, also delight. On top of that, it’s not as though I’ve had long hair all my life. I started growing it out this time less than three years ago. I’ve even done this once before, although that was more emotionally intense: I started growing out my hair during my senior year of high school, and through most of college it was an important part of my identity, that very long vivid red hair. I had it cut in the spring of my senior year of college, mostly out of the same sense of OMG TOO MUCH HAIR, but I could really only go shoulder-length. I was honestly not ready for short hair. (I went about this short a little over a year later if I remember correctly.) This time? Totally ready.

“Going short in the winter?” – so it may turn out that I cut all my hair off during the coldest week of the entire year…although so far that hasn’t bothered me too much, especially since I was wearing it off of my face and neck most of the time anyway. (Something the hairdresser said to me: if you’re wearing it in buns and braids to get it out of the way most of the time, you might as well cut it short.) And as a surprise bonus, my favorite knit hat actually fits better now, even looks super-cute (IMHO) with the crazy curl things.

Mostly I’m just immensely enjoying the feeling of having my head free.

And this thing that I wrote about yesterday: so this cut has these long wispy bits coming down in front of my ears. In the photo that was my inspiration, they’re long and wispy, but tidy. Dramatic looking, but in a sleek way. On me, with my big wavy hair, it’s this explosion of almost-curl. And at first I was extremely doubtful. I had her go shorter with the bangs, and somehow that helped. I think it kept my face from being overwhelmed by my hair. (MY HAIR.)  But I kept in mind the idea that I was trying to be interesting, dramatic, whatever you want to call it. (Later, should link this to the lovely tumblr post from Scrapscallion.) As it turns out, and as I wrote yesterday, that part of this style has gotten a really positive response. Last night I mentioned my reaction to C, and he said something to the effect of that part actually making the style work, not be boring. Which is a reminder that I can probably do stranger things than I think I ought to, and that my take on what works is maybe not always reliable. I am my own unreliable narrator. Which you’d think I’d know that already, but it turns out I very frequently need a reminder.

I’m still considering having her widen the bangs (?) a bit, to give a tad more definition between them and the sides, but I’ll probably just leave it alone.

Ah, it seems a bit shallow to have spent/be spending so much time, energy, and words on just my freaking hair. But there’s so much culturally and personally, so much gender construction, so much family history, so much time and emotion.

more hair talk

So after dithering for weeks and weeks, procrastinating calling the stylist, etc…yesterday I got my hair cut. I went from hair almost to the middle of my back to really short. She took off most of it in a single cut, pulling it together in a ponytail, so it could be donated. And then shorter, in successive passes, occasionally stopping so I could put on my glasses & peer into the mirror, muss it up a bit, and decide what direction to go.

What I’m finding interesting is that the bit that I was sort of doubtful about — the way the long locks in front of my ears curl crazily — seems to be what people find most interesting/cute about the new style.

I have more thoughts about that, and what it means for how I see myself, but it’s late and I’m tired.

Nixon and other things

So tired. Went to bed early, but that just meant that Creamsicle (the fluffy orange cat) was extra-restless in the wee hours. Had food, didn’t want out, didn’t want to cuddle. I think he wanted to PLAY. Eventually I just tossed him outside, mostly because his cry is so piercing that it’s impossible for me to sleep through.

Yesterday an internet acquaintance posted a link to Hunter S Thompson’s eulogy (?) of Nixon, on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Nixon’s birth. I don’t especially care for HST, but found the essay entertaining. If only because Nixon is a sort of totemic figure for me: I was born the day he was pardoned, and have heard many stories of how my mother spent a hot summer of being pregnant watching the Senate hearings. My paternal grandmother claimed to have been in 2nd (?) grade with him, saying that (a) he beat her in the spelling bee, and (b) he was not well-liked. (There was a story about a prank.) When I was 11 (I think), I first learned about Watergate while coming home from Disneyland. I had to help Mom stay up during the late drive; I noticed a “Watergate Motel” near the park, and having heard of it, was curious what it was about. Then I read her copy of All the President’s Men…yes, in junior high school.

When I was a kid I was crazy about Lincoln; read a ton of (kids’) books and admired him hugely. I guess Nixon is the flip side of that, since I’ve also read a bunch of books about him (although none of his own books; OTOH Nixonland is fantastic) and somewhat tongue-in-cheek (but not entirely) am known to say that I’ll blame Nixon for anything. I was reading a book about our health care system that started with a bit of “how we got here” and was entirely unsurprised to read that one of the efforts towards universal health care/insurance fell apart in part because of Watergate.

So the HST line about Nixon bringing together his family in shared loathing (or something to that effect) really resonated.

I’m supposed to go work out again today, and since I have everything, I probably will. I was really balking at braiding my hair, though; doing french braid pigtails is kind of exhausting. I did normal braid pigtails this morning (the braids are really the only way to keep from overheating), but it confirmed again for me that my hair is a problem in getting into a regular exercise routine. Going to call and make an appointment today. (Honest!)

[I miss the title-less era of Blogger. It’s a PITA to come up with titles for these little bits of rambling. I know WordPress will post w/out titles, but I’d need to rework my theme to deal with that.]