The temperature hit fifty again today, and the sun shone. The ground is pretty firm now. When Fooboo walked me around the block this afternoon, I spotted only one small patch of ice remaining in a shady spot on a neighbor’s lawn.
Fooboo is a yanker. I survive these walks, Dear Reader—which are like non-mechanized tractor pulls—though a combination of dexterity, guile, and inborn inertia.
Three days ago, February 28, a robin sang at us from a bare lilac bush as we rounded a corner near our house.
Here in Madison, snow can fall in mid-May.
But it sure seems spring is here for real, easily a month ahead of time.
I’ve been sawing up some birch logs a neighbor gave me. But also, I’ve been sitting in my zero-g chair out in the yard, reading a book. Everything’s dolce, I’ve got a whole lot of niente, and it only goes so far.
With a hey and a ho and a hey nonny-no, I’ve been sprung.
Seek nothing ponderous, Gentle Reader. Hold me to no word-count. Let me be, I prithee.
Enjoy yourself. See you next week.
Blessings,
Larry F. Sommers
Your New Favorite Writer



Don’t get too excited about an early Spring. On March 10, 2010 Washington, DC got 32 inches of snow.
“Hope springs eternal in the human breast; Man never is, but always to be blest.”–Alexander Pope
I lied, it was February 10. I just reviewed the pics.
Ha! Nonetheless, your advice was well taken. It certainly could snow again. But I have a feeling it won’t. Except maybe a teeny bit today.
I hadn’t seen the word “prithee” in ages. I like that word and I like your article. Neil S.