RDS: "With familiarity the profound becomes mundane. With passion the mundane becomes profound."...... Saul Bellow :" A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep." ......MORE PHOTOS @ saunterings.com

Friday, April 1, 2011

LATE WINTER THAW-SAPSUCKER WOODS


















Winter goose prints exposed in spring as thawing begins on Sapsucker Woods pond



Early in March a two day thaw and spring seemed so close. Silly me I made a trip to Sapsucker Woods thinking that this would be my last chance to see the retreat of winter. Chuckle, chuckle, Thursday and Friday were sweet with spring fever breaking out. Robins were arriving and Red-winged blackbirds too. Cardinals sang into the deep blue sky, chickadees and jays and even crows changed their tune!! Then Sunday early snow began, and fell for 24 straight hours and almost 20 ". Spring sprung a snowy leak.

This is what caught my eye when spring was on my mind and Sapsucker Woods called forth!!

Winter's first retreat is at the edge when dry draws the solar warmth and spreads to the wet.


Every non-white absorbs the ever-brighter sun and, as the degree days accumulate, dramatic changes occur.

In winter all is uniform, details matter less. But as spring draws near they matter and become early spring events.



For while most life is still dormant, the
the first hints are seen.

In nutrient rich, shallow ponds exposed to the late winter rays of sun, non-green algae starts to grow and spread in March "warmth".


Branches, twigs and sprigs and even sub-surface variations alter degree-days and magnify the effect.


The snow spots in the pond seem to be remnants of goose prints made in winter snow. Slightly compressed snow, compacted and with more moisture, freezes harder and denser in the cold that follows a brief thaw.


Adding yet another discontinuity that is magnified as thaw sponges solid ice.

Surprising is the color as the winter begins to ebb. Sky blue sky appears while even looking down, the fall leaf color brown and tinge of moss green portend the life abundant soon.






At Sapsucker Woods the trail crosses a road to a more wooded wetland that is so dramatically different from the large open ponded areas.

A twig in ice not
visited by much sun is still encased in gray ice and not surrounded by brown algae. Is pi R squared or calligraphy displayed?
The wooded ponding areas are less nutrient rich and gray is ice color.


Along the H. W. Saunders boardwalk these roots of a long fallen giant have always caught my attention. Many moments of searching and with much film exposed I have yet to capture the feeling that I have when I pass and stare and reflect.
The years that have passed since this tree has fallen, the character and beauty, a patina of moss and lichen and old age, pine needles and and fall leaves, is never fully captured.

I guess the image is in my head and perhaps will stay put!



Patterns and swirls form as the ice slowly thins. Currents ever so slight enhance patterns and leave their mark to see. Soon all the ice will melt and patterns disappear.

Each spring paints images, ever changing images
never just the same.




2 comments:

Sherri B. said...

You captured the essence of that tree beautifully...it looks like the skeleton of a once magnificent creature, splayed there in all its glory, filled with history and stories to tell. Your photos are gorgeous - it always amazes me how the neutral colors of nature can still be so strikingly and organically beautiful. Happy spring to you, RDS!

Anonymous said...

Hey - I am definitely glad to find this. cool job!

About the Sauntering Recluse

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Ithaca, New York
Greenhouse operater well-rooted, now branching out. Photo and writing interests now springing from a long term dormancy.

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