Day 13

March 21, 2009

It is the first day of spring, still… the air freezes my nostrils like winter.  The ground is sugar-coated and solid.

Sugar-coated

It was surely mud yesterday, and it will surely be mud later today.  Now, it crumbles and cruches beneath my feet.  Last night’s star-studded sky sucked heat from the forest floor freezing underground moisture, returning puddles – and even moving water – to solid state.

Under-the-mud Ice

Icy Creek

A leaf in the creek bed is decorated with crystals.

Crystal-framed Leaf in the Creek

Birds, undaunted by the cold, sing their love songs.

Day 12

March 20, 2009

I’m finding it harder this year to keep this commitment…

Day 11

March 18, 2009

Dusk.  Two White-tailed Deer bound off for cover as I enter the woods.  Crows gather noisily from all directions to roost.  The gray sky turns grayer.

Traffic noise.  People noises…  Then a loud outburst from a Cardinal.

I wonder… Will the salamanders move tonight?

Bergman Park

Day 10

March 17, 2009

No time to sit… Cleaned and repaired Bluebird Boxes… Perhaps now I see why the original Sit Spot Challenge was set February to March and not March to April…

Audubon

Day 9

March 16, 2009

Couldn’t sit.  Had to walk.  Beautiful day!  A turtle day…

Painted Turtle

I walked with Sarah.  We counted at least 80 Painted Turtles on the various ponds…  This one (Spatterdock) had easily 70:

80 Painted Turtles on Spatterdock Today

Audubon

Day 8

March 14, 2009

High Ice Low WaterIt feels like spring today.  The sun is out.  The water is receding rapidly but ice remains – forming ballerina skirts around the trunks of trees.  As the sun warms them up, they let loose making strange noises…  like glass breaking, but not real glass… more like stage glass – break-away glass…

A mixed flock of blackbirds – Red-winged, Grackles, Cowbirds – seem to be competing for the Loudest Song award.  Geese are arguing over prime nesting sites… honking, hissing, flapping, chasing.

Muskrat 2A hungry muskrat is not afraid of me and comes for mustard greens on the bank of the pond.

Audubon

Day 7

March 13, 2009

Didn't take this today... but sky was this color.Not so cold today.  Clear and sunny turned to that pinkish-orange.  Stars are brilliant in a black sky.

Day 6

March 12, 2009

It just didn’t happen today…

Day 5

March 11, 2009

The wind is brisk and bitter bringing tears that sting my eyes and make my nose run.  Inside wool socks and “Herman Munster Boots” my feet are warm and dry, but the rest of me wishes for another layer.  Christmas FernThe soft, saturated soil squishes beneath my boots – even splashes sometimes.  With hands pushed deep in jacket pockets, my pace is quick because I know that once I descend the slight hill into the woods, there will be some shelter from the wind.

In cracks and nooks where the sun can’t reach, frozen patches of dirty snow remain.  The rest of the woods is brown and tan and gray… and only when I search for it can I find a bit of green from last year’s ferns, or a spiral of orange on a new turkey-tail fungus.

Skunk CabbageBut there!  My first spring wildflower… such as it is…  the deep purply-red hood of a Skunk Cabbage.  I plunge a finger inside to see if it is true that the flower’s high metabolism generates noticable heat.  I imagine I feel it… but I’m not Really Certain.

I finally reach the log that serves as my chair and I sit closing my eyes and taking a few deep breaths to quiet my mind.  The wind rushes and roars above me, then quiets and starts again.  When I open my eyes, I see that the leafless trunks of the trees are waving wildly in the strong winds.  There are many blow-downs in these woods… and I wonder how it would feel to be nearby when one came crashing down…

Other than a few distant vocal crows, there seems to be no wildlife out and about.  Are the squirrels enjoying a wild ride in their round leaf nests high above?  Or are they nestled underground.  And where are all those cavity-nesting birds that played here a couple of days ago?

The walk from the woods to the car is even more bitter than the walk from the car to the woods was…  I will be happy to get home and into my jammies.

Bergman Park

Day 4

March 10, 2009

SwansThe rain stops briefly. Well. It slows down some. I choose the benches on the covered overlook for my sit spot today.

Forty-six Tundra Swans resting here tonight:  they’ll be gone tomorrow.

One Red-winged Blackbird announcing his territory:  he’s here to stay for a while.

A Muskrat playing hide-and-seek in the brush: he’s a permanent resident.

Audubon