Summer 📍

🖼️ Photos 📽️ Videos

Earlier Sunsets Come in August

In August’s grasp, the sun descends, With earlier hues, the day transcends. A canvas painted, skies a blush, As daylight wanes in gentle hush.

Sunsets sooner, a soothing sight, A tranquil pause before the night. A gift bestowed, the moments deep, In twilight’s arms, the world takes sleep.

Yet, in this change, a silver thread, A chance for dreams to be widespread. Extra slumber, a cherished boon, Restoring strength from sun to moon.

Though park’s allure and bicycle’s race, Seem lost amid time’s fleeting embrace, Remember well, as darkness cloaks, The beauty of dreams, as daylight invokes.

So trade the rush for peaceful rest, Embrace the night, and be truly blessed. For in the quiet, the soul’s rebirth, We find in sleep, a priceless worth.

Warning! Summer is an Endangered Species

They say that all good things must end some day. Autumn leaves must fall.”
– Summer Song, Chad and Jeremy

Today starts the first weekend of August, the final full month of summer. We very well may have some hot and balmy days well into September, but the reality is the very short season known as summer is rapidly fading into history. Those delightfully long summer days with their balmy heat are rapidly starting to fade into the rear mirror. It’s not say that we won’t have hot and humid summer days in August, but the reality is hottest weather on average, is well behind us.

The days are rapidly getting shorter. The longest day, with dusk not occurring until well after 9 PM is now just history, gone soon after the calendar officially said summer. Now every day gets shorter – maybe only a few minutes each day, but its still fading away quickly. Now that I’m done with grade school and college, the significance of Labor Day weekend, in a few weeks, is not as big as it might have been in years past. But still the tyranny of the calendar can not be overcome – summer will be overcome by fall then quickly winter in a matter of weeks.

Quarter

Peak color will overtake Moose River Plains three weeks after Labor Day. The highest peaks of the Adirondacks will see falls beauty even quicker. Fall in lower elevations comes a little later – maybe mid-October, but even those dates are not that far away. Those colors are like the yellow on a traffic light, warning us all that winter is not far around the corner. Indeed, by the time we see fall’s beauty, it may very well dip into being pretty cold.

I like fall, and I am sure many of you do too. But it’s coming much too fast, as it always does. Please, get out and enjoy Summer 2023, before it’s too late. There will be future summers, but there will never be another Summer 2023 in our lifetimes. We all will be a year older next summer, and the we all will have changed, regardless what pretend to do.

Map: Debar Pond

July

The warmest month is upon us, when we celebrate our country's independence and enjoy many delightful summer past-times.

July is the hottest month of the summer. It’s the month when the school children are out from school and the legislature has left Albany for the year. Hot and humid, but wonderful summer days upon us, as we enjoy long nights in the summer haze.

Campsite with Views

There won’t be any real cold days in this month. Rainy days are a rarity, although one always to be on the watch for the heavy thunderstorms that often come by afternoon. Humidity will be high, one things warm up by mid-day. Regardless, with long days, one can get up, hike up a mountain, break by early afternoon, and then enjoy nice nights. We will enjoy the wild blueberries and the wild raspberries as spend time outdoors.

Blueberries Along the Trail

July is the month when we celebrate the birth of our nation with Independence Day. Always a long weekend, it will be a nice one. We will enjoy fireworks, both legal and illegal, lighting them off, into the summer skies. We will watch the fireflies as they fill the fields at night with their flickers of light.

It will be an enjoyable month.