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In Spring | Month

To live through April is to witness a resurrection in slow motion. Go outside in early April. Listen. What do you hear? Not the full-throated chorus of summer, but something more tentative: a single robin testing a phrase, the creak of a thawing branch, the rush of snowmelt turning roadside ditches into temporary creeks. The ground itself seems to exhale. After months of iron-hard frost, the soil softens, becomes spongy underfoot. Mud season, the locals call it in the north country. But mud is just water and earth remembering how to love each other again.

There is a peculiar magic to the month that sits squarely in the middle of spring. Not the shy, hesitant beginning of March, where winter still keeps a cold hand on the landscape. Not the lush, confident fullness of May, when leaves are fully out and the world has gone green and drowsy. No—the true heart of the season belongs to April. month in spring

And then—the green. Oh, the green. It arrives overnight, it seems. One morning you look across the valley and the trees are still gray twigs. The next morning, they are wrapped in a haze the color of pistachio. This is the famous "spring green," a shade that painters have tried and failed to capture for centuries. It is not a color so much as an event. It is the sound of chlorophyll rushing through a trillion tiny veins. It is the planet holding its breath and then letting it out all at once. The bird feeders, neglected all winter, suddenly become battlefields. The goldfinches are losing their olive drab for buttercup yellow. The juncos, those snowbirds, are packing their bags for the north, and in their place come the newcomers: the phoebe, pumping its tail on a fence post; the kinglet with its jewel-like crown; and finally, the herald of everything good, the song sparrow, singing from the highest branch of the lilac bush. To live through April is to witness a