
Western Massachusetts doesn’t flip from winter to spring. It sort of negotiates its way there.
You’ll still see snowbanks piled up in the corners of parking lots, gray and stubborn, like they’re not quite ready to let go. And right next to them — if you’re paying attention — you’ll see the first shoots pushing up out of the ground. Not blooming. Not even close. Just showing up.
I think that’s why it has always stuck with me.
Growing up here, nothing really arrived all at once. You didn’t wake up, and suddenly everything was different. It was always a process. Slow shifts. Small signs. You learned to pay attention, or you missed it.
And maybe that’s why people who are from here — or who choose to stay — tend to be the same way. We don’t rush things. We don’t force big, dramatic changes if they’re not ready. We adjust. We move forward a little at a time. It’s not flashy, but it’s steady.
It shows up in the way the light changes just a little later in the day. The way people start walking again, even if they’re still in heavy jackets. The way everything feels like it’s stretching after a long pause.
When I was younger, I don’t remember ever “waiting” for spring. We just noticed it when it started happening. And it always did. Not perfectly, not all at once, but steadily, year after year.
That’s Western Mass in March. A little bit of winter is still hanging on, and a little bit of something new is starting underneath it.
And honestly, I see the same thing in real estate this time of year. It’s not a switch that flips overnight. It’s a shift. More conversations. More movement. Homes are starting to come on, buyers are starting to look again. Nothing dramatic — just the beginning of momentum.
And if you’ve lived here long enough, you don’t rush it. You just recognize it when it starts to happen.
Lesley Lambert, Western Massachusetts REALTOR with Park Square Realty


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