aa{"id":1594,"date":"2016-04-06T02:49:58","date_gmt":"2016-04-06T02:49:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/sharonsztar.com\/?p=1594"},"modified":"2021-01-27T04:28:39","modified_gmt":"2021-01-27T04:28:39","slug":"eating-with-the-weather-part-2-the-autumnal-shift","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sharonsztar.com\/eating-with-the-weather-part-2-the-autumnal-shift\/","title":{"rendered":"Eating with the weather Part 2: The autumnal shift"},"content":{"rendered":"
I wait for the wind to tell me that Autumn has arrived.<\/p>\n
It comes in that shift from the warm Summer breeze that seems to tickle my soul, to the cold, even harsh, current of air that penetrates my bones.<\/p>\n
Living in Byron Bay, it happens more subtly. The moisture coming off the ocean seems to temper the change of seasons. Though the surrounding flora blossom colourful berries and bright yellow flowers, there are no deciduous trees to really mark the Autumnal switch.<\/p>\n
In my first year here, Summer just seemed to roll into Winter and it was only after a conversation with a tree-loving friend that I realised it was because I never saw an Autumn leaf! That oh so familiar sight of green turning red, then orange, and finally through to yellow, doesn’t occur in an Australian native environment.<\/p>\n
So although Autumn officially commenced over a month ago, it took a trip to Melbourne for me to feel ready to write this piece. Having swum in a 26 degrees ocean the night before, touching down in the southern state provided a shock to my system that reached straight into the part of our body that feels Autumn the most – our skin!<\/p>\n
Within 24 hours my otherwise soft and smooth complexion started to show little cracks, my moist lips went dry and red patches formed in those places I’m prone to irritation. It’s not only the green lush leaves that shrivel up, but us too!<\/p>\n
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