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Poor Will's Almanack: March 22 – 28, 2011

Mourning Cloak Butterfly
Flickr Creative Commons user continis
Mourning Cloak Butterfly

Poor Will’s Almanack for the sixth and final week of early spring, the 17th week of the natural year

As Early Spring comes to a close, then mourning cloak butterflies, the question marks, the tortoise shells and the cabbage butterflies come out, and when that happens, catfish are getting ready to feed in the rivers, and goldfinches are turning gold in the honeysuckles. The predawn chorus of birds begins near 5:00 a.m. Later in the day, flickers and pileated woodpeckers call. Winged ants will be flying then, and garter snakes will lie out sunning.

When butterflies appear, spring picks up speed, the number of new plants increasing every day even though the air is cool. Whenever butterflies emerge, hepatica, harbinger of spring, and twinleaf are pushing out. Toad trillium and Dutchman's britches are ready to open. The foliage of wild geranium, clover, and columbine is growing. September's zigzag goldenrod is two inches long. Leaves of the golden Alexander are an inch across. Scarlet cup mushrooms swell in the dark.

All the leaves and fungi and butterflies are signs that the western sandhill cranes are migrating through the Rocky Mountains and the eastern cranes are moving up through Ohio. The road to Savannah is green with leaves half emerged. Wisteria is fragrant along the Georgia coast, and fields of rice show off their purple blossoms. In Alabama, it's time for redbud trees and pears to bloom. On the outskirts of New Orleans, winter cress is going to seed, and huge, squat yellow thistles grow beside the roads; in the French Quarter, azaleas and camellias are wide open, and yellow day lilies and the crepe myrtles are flowering.

Next week on Poor Will's Almanack: notes for the first week of middle spring. In the meantime, watch golden forsythia flowers to open, the passageway to Middle Spring.

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Bill Felker has been writing nature columns and almanacs for regional and national publications since 1984. His Poor Will’s Almanack has appeared as an annual publication since 2003. His organization of weather patterns and phenology (what happens when in nature) offers a unique structure for understanding the repeating rhythms of the year.