The CENIZO IS BLOOMING!

Leucophyllum frutescens - Purple Sage, Texas S...
Image via Wikipedia

My community theater debut came the year tee-shirts read, I Survived the Summer of 1980.

That was a bad one, weather-wise. It was hot and dry. No rain, no time, no how.

I spent June and most of July, four evenings a week, in the auditorium of a San Marcos junior high school.

At the director’s signal, the lead tenor ambled onstage singing:

Overhead the sun is shining
Not a cloud across the sky
Not a sign on the horizon
And it’s gonna be another hot day

Underneath, the earth is burning
Crops is bad and land is dry
Still the sun
Keeps on returnin’
and it’s gonna be another hot day

Then the chorus, of which I was a member, ambled on after him:

Yes, it’s gonna be another hot day.

We sang a lot about heat. We sang a lot about rain, too.

None of us had to be told to move slowly or to look tired and sweaty and miserable. Except for a set of double doors on each side, the auditorium was sealed shut. No breeze swept through. Until opening night,  the air conditioner stayed off.

The play in rehearsal was 110 in the Shade, Tom Jones’ and Harvey Schmidt’s musical adaptation of The Rainmaker.

In every night’s backstage conversation, someone noted the irony of our situation. A college girl said, “Wouldn’t it be neat if it doesn’t rain all summer, and then, on opening night, at the very end of the last act, when sound-effect thunder begins to rumble, rain begins to pour down outside?”

We forgave her the thought. She was young, and heat had obviously addled her brain. In addition, it’s always been my policy to cut sopranos of her quality quite a bit of slack.

As it happened, rain spoiled the effect by arriving a few days before the play opened, and by the time we closed, most people skipped the cast party. Drought followed by heavy rain usually equals flooding of area creeks, sometimes of rivers. No one wanted to get caught by high water.

Heat notwithstanding, I loved that summer. The privilege and joy of singing made the discomfort worthwhile. Let me sing and I’ll put up with a lot.

Or I would in 1980. The current summer finds me in a different frame of mind.

The spring of 1980 was relatively cool. Thermometers waited until early June to skyrocket.

This summer began in April. This summer, we’re losing trees. Most of Texas is in extreme or exceptional drought. An arborist told one of my friends that we’ll be seeing the effects for years to come. Wildfires cover the state. The Llano River is drying up, and with it that area’s source of water. And then there are the farmers and ranchers, and the crops and the livestock. And the people who live without anything to cool their houses. Family Eldercare is once again collecting fans for people who can’t afford fans or air conditioning.

Technically, we’re now in the midst of a cold front: highs are between 95 and 99, two-digits temps until next Monday. Tomorrow and Thursday, there’s a slight chance of rain.

I confess–every time the local weatherman predicts that chance of rain, I laugh. Bitterly. Derisively.

Then today, I saw cause for hope: the cenizo is blooming. A hedge bordering a little strip mall just a mile or so from my house bears a dozen or so little purple flowers.

Google cenizo and you learn the shrub blooms after a rain.

Ask me, and you learn it blooms before. I know. I’ve been watching it for years.

This afternoon, when I saw those purple petals, I got so excited, I came close to running the car right up onto the sidewalk.

One swallow doesn’t make a spring, of course, nor do a dozen flowers make a deluge.

But tomorrow I’ll drive down to check on their progress, perhaps get out and take a more exact count. And hope those flowers contain a message:

It’s gonna rain
All through the mornin’.
It’s gonna rain
All through the night.

It’s gonna rain
All day tomorrow!
And Lord God A-mighty.
Now won’t that be a sight!

***************

Lyrics to “Gonna Be Another Hot Day” and “The Rain Song (Reprise)” by Tom Jones; music by Harvey Schmidt.

Image of cenizo (purple sage) by J.M.Garg (Own work) [GFDL (www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-3.0 (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons


15 thoughts on “The CENIZO IS BLOOMING!

  1. I hope the cenizo are signaling a respite from your drier than dry and hotter than hot conditions. Doing a rain dance for you! You never know what will work.

    Like

  2. Very interesting post about the 1980 summer. My heartfelt sympathy for no rain. ALwas in a drought for a couple of years but at least we did not have the fires to worry about. I hope it rains in Texas.

    Like

  3. Yes, yes, glorious rain!!! We have a puddle in front of our house. I usually complain to the city that it makes it hard for us to get to our mailbox, but today I welcome it. Mail be damned–it rained! If only it would do it again before October.

    Like

  4. A cold front is 99? But then I lived in TX for a bit and the sun meets you in bed to drag you around all day. June has been cool in Georgia or maybe I get out a lot less, which I’m totally okay with. Speaking of TX, are they still selling cars without ACs or say, charging to install one?

    Like

    1. I don’t know if they sell them that way, but I do see poor souls driving around with their windows down. At 100-plus degrees, they wouldn’t do that if they didn’t have to.

      Like

    2. I guess they sell them without AC. But anyone caught doing that should be arrested and charged with something bad.

      A friend who moved here from Cleveland had a little pickup without AC that she called her “Yankee truck.” She loved it. She also liked to lie on her concrete driveway at noon in summer and soak up the heat.

      Like

        1. No, she’s still here. She’s the one who said to contact book clubs about scheduling readings. Crazy, yes. A good egg, slightly cracked. But she has a car with AC now.

          Like

      1. I agree. I remember walking out of the mall and into the heat. All I could see were heatwaves and then I ended up getting into the wrong car (before carjacking was a free ride and when people left their windows down).

        Lying on the concrete, huh. I guess the sun/heat was one of those rare commodity-type things for her. I can dig that.

        Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.