Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

Sunday, 4 May 2014

Signs of Life

Sunday morning, first Sunday of May.

I glance at the thermometer to see the needle hovering below 10 degrees as though it is stuck, held fast by a force I can't control.  It seems to be perpetually hovering below 10 degrees lately.

I look out of the window, raindrops cling to the needles of the pines, beyond them the sky is white-grey, no promise of sun.



I could sit and bemoan the slow procession of Winter handing over to Spring, the fact that the daffodils are shivering in their pale buds, the bloodroot are refusing to unfurl and it's colder than I would like....  But early morning is my favourite time of the day and this morning I decide to go in search of signs of life.

My walk takes me down to the canal, over the lock gate and onto a path that traces a spit of land built years ago that separates the canal from the river.  There are trees and shrubs and water on either side.


Signs of life - come on Louise, look hard, you are sure to be rewarded.

The first thing I notice are buds, green leaves ready to burst forth.



 

Spindly branches bouncing around in the wind making it hard to get a good picture.  All around me is the sound of birds.  Redwings calling to their mates, robins, grackles and cowbirds - sounding the alert 'intruder!'.

The beavers have been busy gnawing and dragging trees and branches -



It's easy to see their pathways from one side of the track to the other, bits of twigs left in their wake.



Their lodge is on the right hand side - if you look carefully you might see it.

Threads of geese fly overhead calling to each other 'can YOU see Spring?'

A heron swoops through, close enough that I imagine I can almost hear the air beneath it's great grey wings.

Signs of Life.



Fungi clinging tenaciously to thin trunks, I'm constantly amazed by how that survives the winter, the ice and bitter temperatures.

Horsetail is pushing up, it seems as though everything is holding it's breath waiting for sun and warmth, waiting to let go and explode in a boom of greenery.



At the end of the trail I come to a point where the river rushes by on it's way to the sluice gates and the next set of locks.  From here I can look upstream to the migratory bird sanctuary.  Looking for green, seeing grey.



I see two little birds sitting on a branch in the misty wind - at first I think they are chickadees because they are backlit and I can't get much detail. Then they fly around and I see they are a pair of swallows.  I  think they are building a nest in a dead tree trunk, there are holes in it and one of them goes to to check it out as if to say 'what should I do next?'.  Then they are off and up and soaring on the wind, blown like leaves of feather, and around my head and back to the branch and away again.  It was beautiful, and I need to remember - Spring always comes.

Saturday, 23 November 2013

What a difference a day makes

[caption id="attachment_998" align="alignnone" width="700"]Yesterday Yesterday[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1003" align="alignnone" width="700"]Today Today[/caption]

 

[caption id="attachment_999" align="alignnone" width="700"]Yesterday Yesterday[/caption]

 

[caption id="attachment_1002" align="alignnone" width="700"]Today Today[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1001" align="alignnone" width="700"]Yesterday Yesterday[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1000" align="alignnone" width="700"]Yesterday Yesterday[/caption]

 

[caption id="attachment_1004" align="alignnone" width="700"]Today Today[/caption]

Yesterday, sunny, cold, crispy.  Today misty, still, blanketed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, 17 October 2013

Colour Wheel

As our earth and the  year spins through it's seasons we are treated to nature's palette of colours.

None of these are more glorious than at this time of year - Autumn. dsc004

 

It seems to me we may not have as many reds this year but instead have been gifted the most beautiful oranges and golds, set like jewels in the sun on blue skies.

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I've always enjoyed the crunch of leaves underfoot, and breathed deep on those Autumn days that were still warm and glowing.  It's only recently though that I have come to really appreciate Autumn for the season that it is.  The season of slowing down, of preparing for the Winter ahead and the season of glorious nature giving us one last show before she sleeps until Spring.

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Autumn is the most wonderful time to look around and really appreciate all that we have.  Not just in our own lives but in the wider world, in the procession of time and the changing carnival before our eyes.

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On this walk I found a young oak.  The sun was lighting up the leaves in blazing greens, yellows, oranges and reds - all at once.

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How can one small tree be so many things all at one time - show so many different facets of itself in one instance.

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After all is not 'just' a tree?

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A walk in nature at any time not only stretches our muscles and cleans our lungs but also refreshes our spirit and our mind.

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This walk was a reminder to me - to let all of my colours shine, especially the elusive red!

 

Sunday, 13 October 2013

Fungusumungus

It's Thanksgiving weekend here in Ontario and the weather is unseasonably mild.  We decided to make the most of the sunny afternoon and take a walk along one of our favourite trails in our area - the Tip to Tip trail in Burritts Rapids.

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It's a beautiful path that climbs gently up a spit of land between the Rideau River and Rideau canal.

What a perfect day!  The geese were honking and the trees are glorious - not quite so red this year I fancy, but bedecked in glorious shades of gold and orange.

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This one is one of my favourites - leaves long gone but it's oozing with personality.

I wish I were a gatherer, I wish I knew what to pick that is edible but I don't.  I suggested we look for fungi and see what we could find.  Not to eat of course, no, no!  Just to take pictures!  I was actually surprised at just how many different kinds we found.

There were tiny ones clinging to branches -

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And drifts of others looking like a flock of moths.

[caption id="attachment_798" align="alignnone" width="480"]DSC_0031 Turkey Tail fungus - thanks Jane :D[/caption]

 

Dead and dying trees are great places to look, this tree had a huge hole on one side - I can't help thinking someone must find that rather cozy.

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On the other side look what we found!

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They look like fairy mushrooms growing in pairs up the trunk!

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Another tree was sprouting these -

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If anyone knows their fungi I'd love it if you emailed me to let me know what these all are :)

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I read something about mycelium once - the root system of fungi and mushrooms - I have the feeling if we had x-ray vision and could see through the forest we would be amazed at the network that runs everywhere bringing these otherworldly growths to life.

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It will probably be Spring before we get to look again as over the next few weeks we'll see temperatures fall away and that will mean that the snow is not far behind.

The colours on this walk were so beautiful and I'll share them in my next post ;)

 

Sunday, 22 September 2013

Mabon

Dance with the WindBirds

Circle and Spin

windbirds

Feel the breeze through your feathers

A chill on your skin

Come stand at the Altar

Of Nature's great worth

nature's altar

Touch the sky with your fingers

Smell the scent of the Earth

scent of the earth

Hear the land sighing as

The Wheel takes a spin

land sighing

Sit quiet, Reflect,

reflect

on the bounty brought in

bounty

As the leaves turn to yellow

To Copper

To Gold

leaf

Rejoice in the Season

Nature's story is told.

red nature

Thursday, 29 August 2013

Nature is wiser by far.

I am constantly amazed by nature.  How the smaller things get the more wondrous they appear.

Yesterday was a misty damp morning, lots of morning glories were in bloom but what caught my eye were the tiny spiderwebs wafting in the gentle breeze.

morning glories and spiderwebs

What miracles occur while we sleep?

spiderweb2

Who danced a thousand steps and more, floating through the air?  Covering great distances with silk and bravery.

morning glory flower

This is the first year I've grown morning glories.
Oh nature you are wiser than wisest human could ever be, more an artist than we could imagine ourselves in our wildest dreams.

morning glory closeup

 

The smaller things get, the more their magnificence.

Dew was everywhere in the garden, for a moment I thought the roses had gone over and that their flowers were drying.

Until I looked closer -

rose with dewdrops

 

Have we ever accomplished anything so remarkable?

dewdrops on a rose

 

I think not.