Stepping out onto our front porch these days I am met with a purple glow. There is a Florida Lilac vine (Petrea volubilis) growing up the trunk of one palm tree there to the right, and it is quite a year for the Florida Lilac. It is stunning and beautiful and it makes you want to stay put and behold it for just a while before you head off to your day. That’s a wonderful thing.
That same Florida Lilac is the cover star of your March Convivio Book of Days calendar. It is the month of Easter and Purim and of many saints’ days designed to give us breathing room in the austerity of Lent. There was St. David’s Day on the First, and then St. Chad, and now, on the Third, St. Winnal. Do you know the old weather rhyme?
First comes David,
Next comes Chad,
Then comes Winnal,
Roaring mad.
If the weather today is “roaring mad” where you are, now you know why. Blame it on Winnal. So perhaps you had Welsh Cakes for St. David’s Day; later in the month, there are more saints’ days that bring good food: St. Patrick’s Day, of course, but also the lesser known St. Joseph’s Day. Well, lesser known if you are not of Italian descent, and if you are, it may be the other way around. St. Joseph brings Italian pastries that the purists amongst us will eat only once a year, for St. Joseph’s Day. And then there’s St. Urho’s Day, which I never would have known of were it not for the fact that I live in a place that is home to the globe’s second largest population of Finns. I only learnt of St. Urho by going to the local Finlandia Days celebration, which back then was held here at Bryant Park on the lagoon. Somewhere in between the wife-carrying contest and a performance by the accordion orchestra, someone got to talking to me about St. Urho, who drove all the grasshoppers out of Finland… and if you think that sounds a lot like some other saint who drove all the snakes out of Ireland, well, yes, you’d be right.
The stories behind all these good fellows will unfold as the month progresses. It is, as well, the month of springtime by the almanac, and the balance of day and night no matter where we live on this planet. That, too, is a wonderful thing.
Now is the time to order from the Convivio Book of Days Catalog for your Easter celebrating! We have handpainted Pysanki eggs made for us by a family in Russia (the Gussaroffs) and traditional handmade wooden bunnies and paper eggs canisters from Germany––the kind you open up and fill with jelly beans or malted eggs. All these things, straight from my childhood to you. ~ John
Balance of day and night. That is wonderful.