I saw photos of folks digging out from deep snow further south of us, but just a few inches of soft fluffy stuff fell on us here in Saratoga -- easy to shovel and easy to walk through without snowshoes. And it even felt kind of balmy today, with temps in the upper 20s. So I went for a walk on the Bog Meadow Brook Nature Trail, entering from the Meadowbrook Road trail head. I had thought I might find hard ice in the marsh that would allow me to venture out into places too soggy for exploring in warmer months. But the stream that follows the trail sure did not look frozen hard enough to walk on! So I stayed on the trail.
The snow had stopped falling when I first left home, but by the time I reached the trailhead a few miles from my house, the snow started falling again, filling the air with big soft flakes, gently drifting down.
Then it started falling harder and harder, with the wind picking up to drive the snow slanting through the trees that line the trail.
I walked as far as where a boardwalk crosses a pond. The wind had relented by now, so the snow was falling gently down once more. The flakes didn't show up in a photo, though, until I set my camera on flash.
It was hard to photograph much of the trailside vegetation, with snow wetting both my camera's lens and view screen. I did take a shot of this Gray Dogwood shrub, its berries long devoured by birds but the spidery pedicels still decorating the ends of the twigs.
I think it's that loneliness that has stolen some of the joy that used to lighten the dark days of winter for me. I'm aware that I've not embraced winter days as I once did. All I need to do is look over my blog posts from nearly a dozen winters past to note how my enthusiasm for the season has faltered this year. The gray skies and drab foliage remnants seem to better reflect my current mood. I searched and searched for some colors today, and eventually I was rewarded by the deep-red twigs of Red Osier Dogwood and the vivid chartreuse of tree trunks decorated with Green Shield Lichen.
My winter enthusiasm has dimmed a bit also with age, and this one seems especially grey. But getting outside still helps--after a walk yesterday, I'm even looking forward to a long cold spell coming up. Though we'll see how much I actually go out in it.
ReplyDeleteIs the lichen harmful to the trees?
ReplyDeleteI never thought of turtlehead fruit as looking like piles of pistachio shells, but they sure do!
ReplyDeleteWell, you wrote long ago in your blog that you were doing it so you could enjoy it in later years; now you can (good thinking)… Ron G.
ReplyDeleteThere have been more than the usual days of grey skies this winter. We are solar powered, so we have really noticed how long it has been overcast and grey.
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