When was our last lovely sunny day? Ah yes, it was last Monday! But Mondays are the days I usually do my week's grocery shopping, and it was already afternoon. Would I have time to fit in a paddle on the Hudson River above the Sherman Island Dam? Well, I would MAKE the time. So I hurried up to Moreau and slipped my canoe in the river where it flows behind an island and in and out of forested rocky coves. How fortunate I am to have such an unspoiled stretch of river, located so close to home that I can just pop in for a hour or two of drifting and dreaming among such natural beauty.
This stretch of the Hudson has become very popular among paddlers over the past few years, but today I had the river all to myself. Myself and some Mallards, that is. But they didn't seem to mind my presence as I let the slow current carry me silently past their perch. I think we were all mesmerized by the forest's reflection in shimmering cool-green ripples.
This stretch of the Hudson calls to me most strongly this late in the summer. For August is when the banks are abloom with a marvelous mix of riverbank beauties, those colorful native wildflowers that thrive despite water-levels rising and falling with every rainfall or changes in hydroelectric dam operations both upstream and down. Just in this short section of bank I see Cardinal Flower, Spotted Joe-Pye Weed, Boneset, Arrowhead, Green-headed Coneflower, Grass-leaved Goldenrod, and at least one sprig of Marsh St. John's Wort.
Ah, but if it was 3 P.M., that meant I'd better get off the river and head to the supermarket. Believe me, it was hard to leave this place of cool green beauty, quiet water, and gorgeous floral abundance. How lucky for me, that I can return any time!
2 comments:
Your words and photos translate the tranquility you experienced amazingly well! Felt like being there. I thought of you a lot this weekend while racing south for a single day at the Outer Banks, then hustling back to NY. I saw whole states full of plants and trees that I didn't recognize and had no idea where to start looking. For example small trees with sharply cut compound leaves and light purple flowers. No clue. Alan figured out Crepe Myrtle, but we still have found the little trees.
You are lucky indeed!
Post a Comment