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Thursday, March 29, 2012

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Little Blue Flowers Three Ways


Below, with accented edges....


...and finally, below, with the solarizing filter.


Random Happy Sights












Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

The Other Side of "Country"



I don't intend these photographs as criticism of country ways. To me they all have wistful--even poignant--stories to tell. 









Sunday, March 18, 2012

Country Morning


Saturday, March 17, 2012

A “Walk” with Sarah

Small spring cataract
It is late afternoon, sunny and bright, when I set out overland with Sarah, wearing a heavy coat (the wind is cold) and tall rubber barn boots (because of mud, weeds, and remaining patches of snow). We cross the back meadow directly and enter the youngest part of the orchard into the Eastern Woods, then make our way along the creek. Wanting the overview of the creek’s meanders from a higher point of view, I scramble uphill through slippery leaf litter. Many small trees and branches of larger ones are dead, but until the leaves come out their lack of life is not readily apparent, which means one must be careful what one grabs for support and balance when climbing steep slopes.


Looking upstream


Meandering creek
The view is long through the tall trees this early in the season. Trees tower, the creek meanders. There are no spring wildflowers yet, and even the wild leeks have not made their appearance, but there is plenty to see—storm damage, woodpecker evidence, and such. Sarah is in her own world of smells, but she comes running when called. We both feel intensely alive in the woods, exploring in our different ways. 

Still contributing in death
At last, tired and happy, I track to the high, open edge of the woods that opens onto the orchard. There is the view out to South Fox Island, always a satisfying sight. And then—the obvious moment to return to the house--am inspired to go back down to the creek where it turns west. Sarah, never impatient to get back indoors and enthusiastic always over a chance to explore the creek, has no objection.

Horsetail--a prehistoric plant

Low and waterlogged
Hillside seep
Sarah leaps and I wade across (I find a narrow spot and am glad of my boots) and climb up the pine woods slope on the north side, making our way gradually west, i.e., downstream. The whole hillside to the north of the creek is clay, and it is soggy with seeps. Some of them form clearly obvious rivulets through vegetation; in other places the ground is simply very waterlogged like a giant sponge. It is high ground, not low, but the hillside is alive with water running down to the creek. As for the creek, it is swollen over its overgrown banks. I am constantly ducking under or pushing through wild roses, Red osiers, wild grape vines, and young saplings. Here the deer and coyote and fox come to drink. No doubt they make their way more easily.

Upstream from willows, a tangled path
At last, shouting distance from my clothesline and strawberry patch, we come opposite our house, to the low area marked from a distance by a line of enormous willows. Over the years the banks of the stream here have become more and more overgrown. It’s no easy stroll down to the water—and the water spreads out in strands and ponds, all of them littered with large dead branches. I make my way cautiously. The first year I had my garden at the farm was a drought year, and  we had no working well. I climbed several times a day down to the creek with buckets to fill for the garden. That would be a more difficult proposition now, the creek so overgrown and me fifteen years older. The slope up from creek to house is unstable and risky, too. Rocks thrown here years ago have never completely settled. For an animal as large as a human being, each step must be carefully assayed. Up to the old windmill, safely! Home again!

These rambles will not go on forever. Someday I will be confined to house, yard, and garden. For now, the enjoyment is as great as when I was ten years old—maybe more so, because of my awareness of the limits of time. As a girl, I always wanted to live in the country. Fortunately for me, my parents bought a house on the very edge of a suburb, with farmland on the other side of the road, and one set of Ohio grandparents lived on several acres down a dirt road, on a small paradise of gardens, fruit trees, and raspberry patch, with chickens and a cow. But it was never enough. I wanted the farm, and I wanted the wilderness every day, not only for one week in the summer. It occurs to me that I am now having—and will have for as long as I’m able—the childhood I always wanted.


Thursday, March 15, 2012

Owl in Cut Timber


Do you see the owl? Look below--



Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Random Spring Sights


Houdek Creek was swollen with melted snow on Tuesday, March 13. Below, see the creek rushing into Lake Leelanau.



As for Lake Leelanau, it still held a lot of ice yesterday--


--but ducks found open water in which to paddle,


and in the front yard winter aconites burst into bloom.


Sarah was happy to greet Fergus and MacDuff again. She hadn't seen them for ages.

Finally, I was happy to see that many old, tall birch trees survived the weight of the recent heavy snow.


Wednesday, March 7, 2012

See Sarah Run




Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Late Winter Storm: Random Shots


Random they may be in one sense, but it turns out they all revolve around the theme of trees, one of my favorite themes.






Something has gone awry with my cropping capability. At least one of the photographs above could have been improved, in my view, by a little cropping.