The sun was shining and temps were climbing, and lots of folks I greeted at church yesterday smiled and enthused, "Isn't it wonderful that it's not so cold now?" And I smiled and nodded and muttered, "Mmm . . ., NO!" I appreciate that not everyone loves winter's cold and ice the way I do. I do love the drama of below-zero days, and I don't mean frozen pipes and skidding into ditches. I mean the drama of frazil ice heaping up on the Hudson River banks north of Warrensburg, which can put on quite a show. We had a couple of below-zero nights and sub-freezing days last week, which sent me and some other ice-loving pals up to Warren County to stand on The Glen bridge over the Hudson, to watch the frazil forming right before our eyes in the upstream rapids.
What's frazil ice, you may ask? It's a special kind of aerated ice that forms in rapidly flowing rivers in very cold weather, when the water is super-cooled and the air is well below freezing. We could see the rapids just upstream, splashing droplets into the very cold air, where the immediately froze, and dropping back into the flowing water, they cohered with other frozen droplets to form mats of slushy ice, called "frazil."
Crossing to the other side of the bridge, we could see that the frazil rafts remained loose and flowing rapidly downstream.
Following the flow of the frazil, we drove downstream to a site on the Hudson that's known as the Ice Meadows. In this stretch of the river, frazil ice gets deposited on broad meadow-like flats, sometimes to such a depth that the frazil heaps mount right up to the riverside forest, even pushing over trees in the process. On this day, we found that the slushy pans of frazil had congealed to the point where the river's flow was dammed, and rising water deposited the now-whitened chunks of frazil to a location well up on the shore, but not yet to the forest edge.
This week, the ice heaps were not nearly as deep, but still were impressive, covering the entire ice-dam-swollen river's surface with chunky white deposits, except for a few narrow channels where water still flowed.
We were especially fortunate to have Skye with us, since he is a genuine botanist, and he could reliably help us discern the most interesting of the plant remains here. And there were quite a few of them. Due to these very ice deposits, this particular stretch of the Hudson shore is famous for offering habitat for a remarkable variety of native plants, including some of our region's rarest.
2 comments:
The Mohawk is icing up in a similar manner. Getting hard to find the geese and ducks these days.
Always enjoy your winter pictures, and as any good gardener knows, a good period of cold and snow is good for the summer gardens!
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