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Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Long-Day Season

The headline caught my eye just in time to save the page of newsprint from becoming part of the fire-starting equipment last week at the late.  "Darkness creeping in as long-day season ends," it said. 

Apparently Saturday, August 6 was the last day we'll have 14 hours of sunlight until May 2023. It was the end of what the article called the "brightness quarter," the 90 or so days of "solar beneficence and dazzle" we receive every May, June and July. 

It's also the end of long twilights and drawn-out dawns, of slower living made possible by humid air and looser schedules. You might even say it's the end of that feeling of limitlessness and possibility that summer brings. 

But that would be a gloomy thing to write on a spectacular late-summer morning, not in keeping with the bountiful daylight we still enjoy.