This is the road I drove down early one morning after a 5 inch snowfall the night before. The pre-dawn light was really too dim to take photos, but I didn’t let that stop me. It was too pretty, I thought, to pass by without recording it. As Scottish author William Sharp noted: “It is the still ecstasy of nature, wherein every spray, every blade of grass, every spire of reed, every intricacy of twig, is clad with radiance.”
A small brook wound its way through the woods. I loved its polished black surface against the snow.
Beech leaves provided a touch of color.
Mount Monadnock loomed dramatically over the surrounding countryside in a view of it that I’ve never shown here before. In another half hour when the sun kissed its flanks it would probably have made an amazingly beautiful scene but I was on my way to work and I didn’t have time to dilly dally. There was snow to move.
Ice shelves have begun forming along the Ashuelot River. This one was clearly visible as a shelf but when they’re completely attached to the river bank and are covered by snow they can create a very dangerous situation, because there are times when you can’t tell if you’re walking on land or on an ice shelf. I’ve caught myself standing on them before and that’s why I now stay well away from rivers in winter unless I know the shoreline well.
The dark trunks of trees absorb heat from the sun and reflect it back at the snow, which melts in a ring around it. These melted rings seem to be a magnet for smaller birds and animals like chipmunks and squirrels.
If I see whitish or grayish spots on tree bark I always like to take a look because it could be a script lichen or some other lichen that I’ve never seen. In this case it was what I think is a black-eye lichen (Tephromela atra.) According to the book Lichens of North America this lichen grows on stone, bark or wood from the tropics to the arctic.
As you can imagine the raised rimmed, black spore bearing apothecia of the black eyed lichen are extremely small, so it’s always a good idea to carry a loupe or a camera with macro capabilities. Many features on this and many other lichens are simply too small to be seen with the eyes alone.
Another small lichen on a different tree showed some unusual color in its apothecia but I couldn’t see any definite shape without the camera.
The book Lichens of North America says the apothecia on the mealy rim-lichen (Lecanora strobilina) are flat to convex and a waxy yellowish color. They grow on bark and wood of many kinds in full sunlight and the apothecia are very small at about .03 inches. Though the color here looks more orangey pink I think the light might have had something to do with that.
Pixie cup lichens (Cladonia pyxidata) look like tiny golf tees or trumpets, and they are also called trumpet lichens. They are common and I almost always find them growing on the sides of rotting tree stumps. Pixie cups are squamulose lichens, which means they are scaly, but they are also foliose, or leafy. A squamule is a lobe of the body of the lichen (Thallus,) and squamulose lichens are made up of small, leafy lobes. As can be seen in the center of this photo the stalk like cups (podetia) grow out of the leaf like squamules. This is the first time I’ve ever caught it happening in a photo. Pixie Cups were used by certain Eskimo tribes as wicks in their whale blubber lamps. The lichens would be floated in the oil and then lit. The oil would burn off of the lichen but the flame wouldn’t harm it.
Red maple flower buds (Acer rubrum) are just waiting for the signal from spring. These are one of my favorite early spring flowers and I’m looking forward to seeing them again. The flowers, twigs, leaf stems, seeds, and autumn foliage of this tree all come in varying shades of red. These buds are tomato red, according to my color finding software.
Hawthorn buds (Crataegus) are also tomato red but they’re very small; each one no bigger than a single flower bud in the clusters of red maple buds in the previous photo. I had to try several times to get a photo of this one. I think an overcast day might have made things easier. There are over 220 species of hawthorn in North America, with at least one variety native to every state and Canadian province. In New Hampshire we have 17 species, so the chances of my identifying this example are slim to none. Since I see it regularly I know that it has white blossoms.
The hawthorn also has red thorns; as red as its buds and sharp as a pin. This one was about 2 inches long. Hawthorn berries and bark were used medicinally by Native Americans to treat poor blood circulation and other ailments.
I was surprised to see the flower buds of this boxwood shrub (Buxus) showing color on one recent warm day. I hope it was telling me we’ll have an early spring! Boxwood is called “man’s oldest garden ornamental.” The early settlers must have thought very highly of it because they brought it over in the mid-1600s. The first plants to land on these shores were brought from Amsterdam and were planted in about 1653 on Long Island in New York. There are about 90 species of boxwood and many make excellent hedges.
Jelly creps (Crepidotus mollis) are small, quarter sized “winter mushrooms” that like to grow on hardwood logs. They are also called soft slipper mushrooms and feel kind of spongy and flabby, much like your ear lobe. They grow with an overlapping shelving habit like that seen in the photo.
The flowers of native scarlet bee balm (Monarda didyma) are tubular and grow out of leafy bracts, and these bracts were all that was left of this bee balm plant. This is the first time I’ve noticed that they had stripes. The Native American Oswego tribe in New York taught the early settlers how to make tea from bee balm. The settlers used it when highly taxed regular tea became hard to find and it has had the name Oswego tea ever since. The plant was also used by Native Americans as a seasoning for game and as a medicine.
The breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you. Don’t go back to sleep. ~Rumi
Thanks for coming by.
I came across your photo of the melt ring on Google Images and linked to this page. I co-edit a nature & environment column in the Northampton, MA paper, The Daily Hampshire Gazette, under the aegis of our local environmental education center, the Hitchcock Center for the Environment. May I use your picture to accompany a column about water in winter that mentions melt rings? Of course we’ll credit you (please tell me how you want it to read), and I’ll be happy to send you a link to the column when it appears.
Thanks for considering this.
Thanks Michael. I sent you an email about this.
The small brook image is excellent!
Thank you!
The image of Mount Monadnock is wonderful, the local tourism board should use it in their advertising! I loved all the photos of the winter scenes as well. For that matter, all your photos of the lichens and other small things are also very good. Seeing a few leaf buds makes me happy, even though I know it will be several months before they open.
Thanks Jerry! I did a post about what Monadnock looked like from several towns in the region once, but I didn’t know about that view. I wish I had.
Once we get through February things will start happening. The skunk cabbages will be coming up in early March-not too far off!
One of the best things about visiting Iceland was the snow. We get so little of it here it seems a real treat to crunch through it, although I imagine it’s not so much fun if you have months of it. Those ice shelves sound dangerous though. On our second visit to the Tjornin Lake it had frozen over and was covered with snow. I can see how easily it could be mistaken for solid ground when that happens.
Snow can be very pretty but moving it around is a pain, and since it has to be moved winter means a large amount of additional work for many.
Ice shelves are very dangerous and lakes and ponds can look much like mown fields when they’re covered by ice and snow, so you need to pay close attention to your surroundings in winter.
You are having some nice snowy weather. Our snow melted while we were away in California. Today everything is in a deep freeze, but without the snow cover. I like how the trees melt a ring of snow around the base of their trunks.
Thank you. Yes, we keep getting little nuisance storms that drop 5-7 inches. So far almost all of it has melted between storms. Sorry you’re seeing such cold, especially since your weather is usually our weather, though it often moderates before it gets here. We’re supposed to see 20 degrees by Monday, which couldn’t really be called a deep freeze.
I will look at the next pixie cup I see more carefully.
Bring your macro lens!
That would always help.
I find it so comforting to find that nature itself expects spring to arrive eventually. The buds you’ve found certainly look as though they are ready to swell and open as soon as the weather and length of day are right. I like your macro lichen shots too!
Thank you Clare. Yes, nature knows that it’s spring before we do, I think. I’m anxious to see it this year!
I know that trees set the following year’s buds in the fall but I was surprised to see those maple buds already looking like they do in March. I sure hope they know something we don’t!
That would be good!
I agree!
On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 4:09 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions wrote:
> > > > > > Thank you for your beautiful pictures and education-also the Rumi quote! > > > > > > > > > > > > New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” > > This is the road I drove down early one morning after a 5 inch snowfall > the night before. The pre-dawn light was really too dim to take photos, but > I didn’t let that stop me. It was too pretty, I thought, to pass by without > recording it. As Scottish aut” > > > > > > > > > >
You’re welcome, and thank you Pat.
Those are beautiful snowy scenes. We have a thin covering of snow in places here right now, much more up in the Cascades.
The number of types of lichens out there is amazing. Pixie cup lichens being used as wicks for oil lamps is a new one for me.
We have a lot of hawthorn out here. I had one planted inside the deer fencing for apple grafting experiments, as I read old timers out here did that successfully. Apparently apple and hawthorn are closely enough related. The ice storm took my tree down, though, so this past year’s grafts went with it.
Thank you Lavinia. I’m glad you’re getting snow up in the mountains. That should help ease the drought somewhat, I would think.
Yes, there are a mind boggling amount of different lichens out there. I think you could spend a lifetime studying them and still not see them all.
I’ve never heard of grafting apples onto hawthorn but I have heard that pears will take. I think the rootstock is the part of the hawthorn used but I could be mistaken. In any case it’s too bad you lost the tree. Maybe you can find another in the wild. I see them frequently here.
I love the image of Monadnock. The softness of it makes it nearly look like a painting.
Thank you Pat. That comes from taking its photo when it was almost dark, but I agree; it does have a painterly quality.
I especially liked the photo of Mount Monadnock. Terrific!
Thanks Montucky! It’s just a pimple compared to your mountains but we love it just the same.
Another wonderful collection of photos, well worth getting up early for. 🙂 And thank you, as ever, for sharing the beauty you found, Have a great 2017.
Thank you Ben, and the same to you!
Thank you. 🙂
I hope the boxwood is right! Happy new year.
Thank you Cynthia, me too!
Happy New Year to you and your family as well!
I loved that black shiny brook too and your picture of the mountain was most striking.
Thank you Susan. There really wasn’t enough light that morning so I was surprised they were even useable.