Ice out: March 18.
| Ice out on Lake Nokomis March 18, 2012 |
Yep. Today the ice went out on Lake Nokomis, and probably
the other lakes in the Minneapolis chain. For those who don’t live in the northern
clime, this is a BIG DAY. It’s sort of the unofficial first day of spring. And
this year it’s early. Very, very early.
Just yesterday, there was a sheet of ice over part of the
lake. On the windward side, the ice had been pushed up against the shore,
forming a 3-4 foot wide crust of crinkled shards glinting like broken auto
glass under the brilliant sun.
Today, no ice at all. And the weeping willow tendrils have turned
that shocking dayglow green of early spring.
The average high temperature for Minneapolis on March 18 is
41 degrees. Today it will be 76 or so. Yesterday I think it got to 80. Crazy. Last
winter at this time, we were still up to our butts in snowbanks. This winter, we have never
had more than four inches on the ground at one time, at least at my house. And in the past seven days, we've broken multiple records: earliest 80 degree day, most days above 70 in March, and nearly every single day temperature record in the last week. Historical records. Global warming?
Everybody is out: cyclist, joggers, walkers, stroller moms,
families barbecuing.
Another in the category of things that make you go huh, this
morning, while riding along the Minnehaha Parkway, I passed a couple jogging
with their dog. Nothing unusual there--except that the man was jogging on one
of those high-tech carbon fiber legs (a cheetah) shaped like an upside down question mark.
Given his apparent age, close-cropped hair and muscular physic, I couldn’t help but wonder if he’d lost that leg in Iraq or Afghanistan. Stepping on one of those IEDs, maybe. It would have been rude to ask, so I just peddled by them at the green light. But it got me to thinking: this one man had so much to say about the world we live in. Not the war, although there’s plenty there to ruminate about, but the fact that human ingenuity was perhaps responsible for both the loss of his limb and his return to mobility. This is NOT a comment on the relative morality of either invention, the bomb or the limb. It's just food for the fishes.
Given his apparent age, close-cropped hair and muscular physic, I couldn’t help but wonder if he’d lost that leg in Iraq or Afghanistan. Stepping on one of those IEDs, maybe. It would have been rude to ask, so I just peddled by them at the green light. But it got me to thinking: this one man had so much to say about the world we live in. Not the war, although there’s plenty there to ruminate about, but the fact that human ingenuity was perhaps responsible for both the loss of his limb and his return to mobility. This is NOT a comment on the relative morality of either invention, the bomb or the limb. It's just food for the fishes.
Hoping to get in more rides in this week before the weather
returns to some sense of normal.
Happy trails to ya.
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