Open Winter Beetle Blues
Winters up here in the mountains of Idaho happen in various degrees of severity. This last one was what we call an open winter. That is, we experienced a fairly mild winter with few blizzards or cruel, relentless storms. The snow never got past two feet deep, and the temperatures never dropped too much below zero.
Joys of Mild Winters
Now, there’s a sense in which we all enjoy an open winter. It means there are more days when we can get outside without the air burning the lungs. And there will not be so much snow to shovel. The black ice is kept at a minimum and the heating bill is reduced.
But a really hard winter is not all that disagreeable either. In fact, we need one up in this country. An extra ten foot of snow in the mountains, for instance, would be a welcome relief to the water table that’s been strapped for a number of years.
More Benefits
Not only that, but many of the old timers also say a severely cold winter is needed as well. For several years now the beetles and bugs have been eating away at the forests around us. It’s a sad thing to watch the needles at the top of a tree turn yellow and die as the beetles do their work. That yellow works its way down the tree until it stands like a grave marker signaling where there once was life.
Beetles Info
The beetles begin to multiply to the trees around it until in a short time acres and acres of forest are completely devoid of living trees.
Now, there’s only one thing that effectively kills that beetle—a brutally cold winter. Let the temperatures drop to 20 or 25 below and the bugs that attack the trees die.
What God Turns to Good
It sometimes surprises folks to find out that God can use even a frigidly cold winter to accomplish good. The same is true in our spiritual lives.
Only so much can be accomplished by the great, smooth, easy flowing, hassle-free days of our lives. Other successes will only come about through trials, temptations, testing, and tough times.
Consider It Joy
Maybe that’s why the Bible says, “Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance” (James 1:3).
Enjoy the open winters of your spiritual life, but also welcome the severe ones too. God has His purpose in both.
Stephen Bly
Circa 1995
Snowy Winter Day Image by Mali Ancor from Pixabay
Beetles Swarming Tree Image by androgames8674 from Pixabay
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Open Winter Beetle Blues” audio podcast by award-winning western author Stephen Bly. Sponsored by BlyBooks.com Legacy Series.
Sign Up on BlyBooks.com on blog page to receive RSS feed by email for podcast blog notices. Related blog article with podcast embed will arrive weekly. Look to the right of the LINK PAGE for “Subscribe to the Blog via Email” and “Enter your email address”.
Would greatly appreciate if you a) SUBSCRIBE, b) RATE, c) REVIEW the podcast. FULL PODCAST INFO: https://bit.ly/3xCxckS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
YOU MIGHT ALSO ENJOY …
Hard Winter at Broken Arrow Crossing, Book 1, Stuart Brannon Series (7 novels total)
Christmas 1876. For a man who didn’t need another disaster, the hard winter at Broken Arrow Crossing couldn’t have come at a worse time. Stuart Brannon lost his wife, baby son and his cattle. He abandoned his Arizona ranch sick with grief a year later … another Christmas. That’s when the vicious Colorado blizzard struck.
Half-frozen, Brannon stumbles into an isolated stage station at the Crossing where he finds a wounded prospector, an abused and pregnant Indian girl, and naive gold seekers. Drawn into their desperate plights, Brannon plunges into the dangerous mission to rescue a boy from Indians and becomes the target of an outlaw band.
No comments yet.