...is waiting for that last Easter cold snap! Regardless of what the calendar says or where Easter falls, veterans of the Rolling Plains know it ain't truly spring until the last cold front stings.
Pretty sure I've been feeling the effects of spring fever for at least a couple of weeks now. North bound on Harrison by Martin Plaza a couple of weeks ago, I whipped a u-turn to check out a bird on a wire that to my peripheral vision looked like a scissor-tail. Proved to be a mockingbird. Then, earlier last week, I noticed a high-soaring raptor over River Bend whose silhouette suggested Mississippi kite. Turned out to be a red-tail hawk.
Still, the robins returning to the lawns of Country Club are not my eager-for-spring imagination. Neither are the giant swallowtail butterflies. The first of the season flitted in front of our Blazer March 15th north of Paducah as we were returning from Matador Wildlife Management Area. I encountered six swallowtails on the 20th along the trail at Lake Wichita Park between Mount Murphy and Murphy's Pond in spite of a ninety-to-nothing south wind. Six swallowtails do not a spring make, but they are a flight in the right direction.
That little two-inch rain Tuesday really greened up the creek bed at River Bend's trail head and the warmer temperatures stirred up the hackberry and little yellow butterflies. I watch for bluebonnets along the Prairie Pathway to set flower buds any day now. Red-shouldered bugs were really going after the last of the soapberries along the trail in front of the United General Store as if no more would ever fall. Of course, red-shouldered bugs being the way they are, soapberries weren't the only thing they were going after, but no doubt the less said about that the better in a family-friendly blog.
The rain also pushed River Bend's north pond out of its banks by a couple of feet, and we have launched Amphibian Watch for 2008. We haven't heard any frogs or toads at River Bend yet, but I'm fairly certain I heard a single male cricket frog earlier this week at Murphy's Pond.
Amphibian Watch, for those who are interested, is a cooperative program with Texas Parks & Wildlife in which we monitor frog/toad populations by checking area lakes, ponds, and streams.
Yes, the true madness of March is watching and waiting for winter's last gasp!