or so it would seem. We are having the sort of weather and the sort of temperatures we should have had in December, in January, in February. It has not rained for weeks now.
I am trying to remember what it was really like when I was a mere kitten and I am certain I am not mistaken. Summer really was warmer then wasn't it?
We had many hot days in the long summer holidays from school. Mum would still toss us outside to "find a shady spot" unless it was too hot even for that. We played games outside even in the heat. We wore shorts and floppy linen hats.
By the time school went back in the first week of February it would still be warm. There would be the occasional very hot day - "over a hundred" in the old Fahrenheit units - but the temperatures would gradually be settling down. By March the temperatures might still be "rather warm" but they were cooling down.
Right now we have had temperatures which are unseasonably warm. No, this is not "climate change". Global temperatures may be getting warmer but this is not climate change. There are apparently other things affecting our weather. I do not pretend to understand the science. I do know that the "cyclone" on the east coast probably had something to do with it all - but the cyclone itself was, thankfully, a bit of a fizzer. They may have had too much rain and consequent flooding but, while bad, the whole thing could have been much worse than it was.
I looked at the weather forecast for the rest of the week. It still says over 30'C for each day. There is a hint, just a hint, of a possible shower or two over the weekend even with a forecast of temperatures in the high thirties. I wonder.
"Can't they make it rain?" a small friend asked the other day. His "garden" (in two pots) has died in the heat but he has said, "I'll do it again because I want to take it to school for show and tell."
It reminded me of taking my saucer of wheat to school. It was grown on a small wad of cotton wool and kept damp until the wheat sprouted. We all had to do the same thing. When that was done we had to follow the story of the wheat right through to the end result of a loaf of bread. As a kitten from the country I already knew far more about this than any city child. I was bored by the simplicity of what the teacher was telling us. I had seen farmers plant and harvest. I had seen bags of wheat (as they were then) and I had been to visit the mill which had supplied flour to the little bakery. I had watched the baker too...and eaten the results still warm from the ovens in the bakery.
Brother Cat and Middle Cat went through the same lessons. I found a page of Middle Cat's work about it when we were clearing the house. Mum had kept it for some reason. Mum was not sentimental but the occasional thing came to light. There was nothing at all belonging to me but something from each of the others. It all made me wonder how they remembered their own kittenhood.
It has to be different now. I doubt that little T... learns about bread in the way we did. His "show and tell" garden if he does remake it may be the only "garden". He is learning about gardens from his grandfather not his father and not his teacher. There is no time for that at school.
Things are changing and perhaps the weather is changing too. I still doubt that weeks of temperatures in the thirties and no rain at all is "normal" now. It is a blip in the system. Things will go on changing but they will do it slowly.