......unruly sun" as that wonderful MetaphysicalPoet. John Donne" called him.
Last evening I watched the programme on the Yukon River. I looked at my Atlas afterwards and traced its progress through Alaska. And during the programme they briefly mentioned the Athabasca River and I know Red lives by the Athabasca Glacier so wonder how far you are from the Yukon Red, if you are reading this.
It takes seeing a programme like that to make us realise just what cissies we are where the sun is concerned. I am not a 'sun worshipper' (one of my carers is ) and if it does get really hot then my reaction is to go and lie down in a darkened room until the sun sets.
But this year, with Easter being at its absolute earliest, we seem to have been expecting Spring sunshine early too. And we do have to remind ourselves that it is we humans who have imposed dates and names for the Seasons on the World. Plants know better. They go on hours of daylight - they don't know when March 21st is or when the first day of Spring is. And as for the first day of the Meteorological Spring - forget it. The days get lighter, the shoots pop out of the ground.
But looking at the Yukon proogramme last night (especially as the week before last the river we looked at was the Zambesi) made me at any rate jolly pleased I lived in what is called a 'temperate' country.
Could I cope with a good six months of the year being dark and icy and bitterly cold and with living in such a remote settlement that if I wanted a new vehicle or a new settee I would have to either wait for the thaw or stand out watching for a vehicle coming up the frozen river with a whole load of things for various drop off points. Thinking about it certainly tends to make one get things in proportion.
But the beauty of it all is unmistakeable, the joy on that day when the sun first breaks through on the horizon; or the morning when you wake up and hear your first drop of water plopping off the end of a huge icicle.
It made me remember flying over I think maybe Greenland and seeing where a glacier met its Waterloo, the sea.
But come on there Mr Sun - I know you are warming up, I felt you on my face when I opened the front door this morning - get a move on and warm a few 'cockles' - we are getting desperate.
If only we could learn to accept each day as it emerges for what it is. But then, if we are farmers and our fields have been under water all winter and the ground is too wet to put our new-born lambs out, and if we let our milking herd out on the fields they'll plough it up for us in a couple of weeks, who can blame us for lying awake worrying?



