The anticipation of spring is overwhelming here in upstate New York. March ushers in a sense of hope as winter relents and spring creeps toward us. Weāre not there yet. We still have more cold gray days ahead, with temperatures barely climbing out of the thirties. More snow will fall and the wind will continue to chafe exposed earlobes, noses and cheeks.
But you can sense spring is almost here. Weāll be setting our clocks ahead this weekend as Daylight Saving Time resumes.
March brings with it Friday fish fry specials that are welcomed by Lenten observers, St. Patrickās Day celebrations and the apogee of the college basketball season. After the conference tournaments wind down, fans will be dissecting the NCAA tourney pairings and filling out their brackets. The NHL season is moving along and the playoffs will be upon us soon.
This is my favorite time of year, because itās a season of possibility, where the full glory of spring and summer lies ahead, just waiting to be plucked like a ripe peach. Now we can allow ourselves to imagine barbecues, pool parties, softball games, weekend getaways, outdoor concerts and fireworks on the Fourth of July.
I am reminded of The Twilight Zone episode Walking Distance (1959) where a business executive returns to his hometown and finds it unchanged. He is overcome by a feeling of nostalgia when he encounters his boyhood self during a summer marked by merry-go-rounds, cotton candy and band concerts, and he tries to instruct his younger self to savor his childhood while he still has the chance.
The man, Martin Sloan, says to the boy: āI only wanted to tell you that this is a wonderful time for you.ā
So in this northern corner of the world, as Mother Nature gets ready to release a measure of heat, we can prepare to store our boots, coats, gloves, hats, sweaters and scarves for another year. We can get to ready to strike the terms black ice, lake effect, wind chill and Norāeaster from our vocabulary, at least for another nine months. Itās about time to step outside, stretch our limbs and live again.
Baseballās Opening Day and the Big Feast at Vinciās House
Meanwhile, spring training continues in Florida and Arizonaāanother sign that winter will be ending soonāand the first pitch of Major League Baseballās regular season is less than a month away.
Bill Vinci, my best friend from my hometown of Rome, N.Y., holds an annual party on the first full day of the MLB season. Regardless of the weather, regardless of where he happens to be employed at the timeāand heās rotated through several jobs over the past decadeāhe invites friends over to his house to watch the opening day games.
Itās an all-day party with a group of friends debating their fantasy teams. Unfortunately, I havenāt had a chance to attend one of these parties because Iāve always had to work or Iāve lived elsewhere in the U.S.
But I find the concept appealing because of the allure of playing hooky from work to watch baseball; and itās also entertaining to see the players shivering on the basepaths and in the dugouts and outfield grass during early April games in cities like Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati and Boston.
Vinci tells me the party consists of watching baseball from the first at-bat to the āfinal pitch on the West Coast.ā And his celebration has real roots in the Rome area, stretching back to Vinciās high school days, starting around 1985.
āI would skip school and have my friends come over and watch baseball and eat in my parentsā basement,ā he says. He adds, āAs the years go by the attendees have decreased due to work, kids, etc., but that hasnāt stopped me from putting on the greatest opening day party in Rome.ā
And the action on the diamond is enhanced by the menu for the occasion; the spread of food includes ādogs, burgers, sausage, hot and sweet peppers and sausage bread, along with chips and dip.ā
So thatās what Iāve been missing all these years.
But Vinci, who serves as director of marketing for the Utica Brewers baseball club of the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League (PGCBL), says the āreason I host opening day is the love and passion of the game of baseball. Itās in my blood and to have friends and family enjoy it with me makes it all worth it.ā
He adds, āas long as Iām on this earth, you can always count on one thingāopening day of baseball at Vinciās house.ā
To that I say batter up.