Yesterday I did
one of my favorite things with my favorite person: we took a foliage drive
through the Ozark and Boston Mountains in NW Arkansas. It was our “welcome home”
gift to ourselves.
We left home
driving west on I-40, and when we reached Arkansas Hwy 23 (known as the Pig
Trail because it used to be the preferred way to travel from Little Rock to
Fayetteville for Razorback football and basketball), we turned north.
I grew up in
west Texas, where autumn foliage was something we read about in geography
textbooks. We had a lot of Mesquite trees (most were just big bushes) that
didn’t turn colors in the fall. The leaves just fell off. And on the few scrub
oak and other hardwood trees out there the leaves just turned brown before they
fell off. The first real color I saw was in Quantico, Virginia when I was in
Marine Officer Candidate School when I was 26 years old.
It was the same
way with mountains. I still remember the first time I saw real mountains: it
was on a trip into New Mexico with my uncle’s family when I was nine. I guess
that dust-bowl-flatland environment of my younger years is what’s behind the
awe I experience in the mountains today. I loved living in northwest Arkansas,
and still love driving through that area. I love to vacation in the Rockies;
and I grieve at the end as I watch the mountains fade in the rear-view mirror.
So yesterday’s
trek with my spouse was very special.
And people were
talking about the “polar vortex” as the first wave of frigid air moved into the
area. The season is changing—just like it does every year about this time. The
earth wobbles on its axis and the northern hemisphere leans away from the sun
and we drag out our lawn rakes and leaf blowers—every year about this time.
Will Rogers
said, “If you don’t like the weather here (Oklahoma), just wait a minute.” Most
states have adopted that axiom as if they originated it. The truth is that it’s
a universal phenomenon.
And isn’t that
wonderful?
Order. Symmetry.
Rhythm. Dependability. All these are attributes of a system that reflects the faithfulness
of its creator. “For everything there is a season,” wrote The Preacher
(Ecclesiastes 3:1). And he concludes, “(God) has made everything beautiful in
its time” (vs. 11).
Brilliant
ambers, yellows, oranges and reds of every tint lined the hills and dells of
the Mulberry River Valley, and the bluebird sky provided the perfect backdrop.
The leaves will fall soon, and their decay will enrich the soil and nourish the
very trees from which they fall.
Every year about
this time.
I think I feel a
“Doxology” coming on!
And that’s the
way I see it through the flawed glass that is my world view.
Together in the Walk,
Jim
Life would sure be boring if every leaf, every person, were purple.
ReplyDeleteJim, I'm glad you're back. I thought I had subscribed, but I didn't get notifications of all the recent posts. I signed up again, so now I'll probably get notified twice! Anyway, I thanks for sharing your musings with us!
ReplyDeleteLove,
Sis