As the calendar turned and Typhoon 15 routed further south than expected, the weather has turned glorious. Yesterday, the sun was hot and the sky was a vivid blue. It was a quintessential fall day.
There are signs of the season everywhere:
dragonflies--blue, yellow, red--darting and hovering
tiny pencil-thin black lizards
ubiquitous spider's webs, with yellow female in the center and tiny male off in the fringes, now filled with debris and tidy packages of past meals
sheaves of rice hanging to dry in the paddies, turning from green to brown
trees full of persimmons the color of tangerines and soon to be deep, ripe orange
clusters of gangly purple cosmos daisies
prickly brown chestnut husks littering the ground
But it was something more amorphous that gave the feeling of autumn rather than Indian summer. The best I could come up with was that the sun shone from a slightly kinder angle, and that the humidity was comfortable.
I think I found the answer in Kevin Short's nature column in today's Daily Yomiuri. In the fall, there is "a shift in the quality of the light. During summer the dense, moist air diffuses the light, suppressing colors and completely blurring the edges of the landscape. Come autumn, however, the air turns crisp and dry, allowing colors and patterns to stand out in far greater brilliance. Not only will the sky be incredibly blue, but the moon and stars at night will shine brighter, and even the mountains on the far horizon will show up in sharper detail."
There were streaks of red in the sky tonight as the sun set. The middle of Fuji's cone was silhouetted black between bands of cloud. The crescent moon moved in and out of sight in the darkening sky.
--Julian
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