The days have lengthened enough now so I can once again get outside after work and that’s always a relief. Having to take enough photos on a weekend for two blog posts can be a challenge, especially when it rains or snows on one of those weekend days. It gets dark at about 5:30 pm now and that means an hour or so to get into the woods. Not much time, but when you live in the woods you don’t have to go far. On this day I chose a bit of woodland near my house that has an old dirt road running through it.
The sun was low and the light was just right to show you the shiny ice that covers the snow. This ice makes breaking a trail through the snow difficult, at best. I can remember how hard it was even at 10 years old.
But someone had driven down this old road with a 4 wheeler or something and that broke the icy crust and packed down the snow, so walking here was a breeze.
A young white pine (Pinus strobus) had fallen across the road and someone had come along and cut it up. We’ve lost a lot of trees to the wind this year but most were dead or dying. This looked like a healthy young tree.
There is a small stream out here that feeds into a large swampy wetland. I was surprised to see it so free of ice.
It was obvious that a large flock of turkeys had been through here. Turkeys are very active in winter and I see them everywhere, but I always seem to be driving at the time so getting photos has proven harder than it should be.
Turkeys have big feet that they use to scratch up forest litter with as they look for food. They’ll get under a stand of evergreens where the snow is thin and scratch up large areas looking for acorns, beech nuts, grapes, or berries they’ve missed on previous hunts. When spring comes they’ll eat buds, fresh grasses, roots, and new leaves. In summer they’ll eat a lot of insects, including ticks.
Mosses look so delicate but they’re very tough and will weather the ice and snow like it wasn’t even there. This is one of my favorite mosses. I like the way its fingers reach out to find new spaces to grow in.
Though there may be snow everywhere you look winter can actually be a very dry season, and this moss was so dry it’s hard to tell what it is but I think it might be brocade moss (Hypnum imponens.) Brocade moss is often very shiny and can have an orange brown color. Its common name comes from the way it looks as if it has been embroidered on whatever it grows on.
As I stopped to take photos I could hear a pine tree creaking as a breeze blew it gently back and forth. It was easy to believe that the sound would be the same on the deck of a wooden ship but it would be the mast creaking there, rather than the tree that it was made from. When this land was first colonized tall, straight pines were prized by the Royal Navy, and cutting any tree marked with the King’s broad arrow mark meant certain death. The trees became known as mast trees and the practice of the King taking the best trees led to the Pine Tree Riot in 1772. In an open act of rebellion colonists cut down and hauled off many marked mast pines in what was just a taste of what would come later in the American Revolution.
I stopped to admire the structure of a beech branch that stood out so well against the snow. Each twig is placed perfectly so one leaf doesn’t block the sunlight reaching another.
A golden puddle on the road told me the sun was quickly getting lower in the sky. This time between day and night is when the night creatures take over. I know this area well and I’ve seen some big bears near here but, though I’ve seen skunks coming out of hibernation already I doubt the bears are awake yet. It won’t be long though.
The old road leads to and around a large swamp. The breeze blew stronger here in this big open space but it was still fairly warm for February. It’s easy to imagine voices on the winds in such a place, whispering softly. For me it’s a peaceful, comforting sound but sometimes it can be a lonely one. I’ve heard that the wind drove early settlers on the Great Plains to madness but I think it was the loneliness more than the wind. It was the voices on the wind, sometimes whispering and sometimes howling, that told them how alone they really were. With a phone in my pocket I could talk to anyone anywhere at any time but they could not. Marty Rubin once said solitude is where one discovers one is not alone, but solitude is experienced differently by different people. For me it is simply a part of who I am and it brings me great joy, but I can understand how it might seem like a burden to others.
The southwest side of this sugar maple had sunscald, which is very different than frost cracking. Sunscald happens when southwest facing bark freezes at night after high daytime temperatures. Direct sunlight or sunlight reflecting off the snow can heat the bark during the day and bring it out of dormancy, and then when it freezes at night the active tissues are killed, resulting in the kind of wound seen here. Cracking and peeling bark is a sure sign of what is also called southwest disease. If this were a frost crack the crack in the bark would be absolutely vertical. This one curves like a snake and the dead bark around it covers a large area.
I’ve never seen witch hazel (Hamamelis virginiana) blossoming out here but here was a large shrub with the telltale cup like bracts on it. It even had the petals still coming out of the bracts but they were still there from last fall and were frozen. Native witch hazels can bloom on a warm day in January but I’ve never seen one blooming this late. The spring blooming vernal witch hazels (Hamamelis vernalis) will be starting to bloom any time now.
Indian pipes (Monotropa uniflora) are white and ghostly and grow in the dark places in the forest. They can get away with doing that because they don’t photosynthesize, but they do have flowers and when the flowers are pollinated they stand straight up from the shepherd’s crook shape seen here. This tells me that the flower seen here either wasn’t pollinated or didn’t see any need to stand up straight like all of its cousins. The seeds are fine like dust and I think the flower standing up straight must have something to do with rain being able to splash the seeds out of the capsule. Many plants and mosses use the same strategy for seed dispersal. Fresh Indian pipe plants contain a gel that Native Americans used to treat eye problems, and the common name comes from the pipes they smoked.
This is what the stained glass looks like in the cathedrals I visit.
I followed my own footprints back down the old road and saw how they meandered from this side of the road to that; a puddle of footprints where I stopped to admire something. This is how it should be for one who studies nature; meander like a toddler and be interested in everything. You see all the small, hidden jewels of the forest that way.
And find joy in the beautiful, simple things that make you smile, like a stream of molten gold weaving its way through a forest.
All this beauty, all this wonder, is right there in my back yard, and it’s in yours as well. I hope you’ll have a chance to get out and see it.
I’ll tell you what hermits realize. If you go off into a far, far forest and get very quiet, you’ll come to understand that you’re connected with everything. ~Alan watts
Thanks for coming by.
I love all your posts. I come back to them for help with identifying mosses and lichens and fungi, and sometimes I come back to them just to wander along your paths and find peace. Thank you.
Thanks very much Nancy. I’m always happy to hear that people are getting something useful from this blog.
Huh. Never saw an Indian Pipe in winter. I thought they kind of faded away into mush.
No, they actually get hard wnd woody and persist through the following summer.
I loved your piece on solitude and learned about frost cracks and southwest disease! We go out at least once a day on our trails that meander all through the Woodlands and along the brook. We are delighted by the feast for our eyes, particularly this winter as we are in a snow pocket and mostly snow shoe on our trails all with names! We see the cracks in the trees but did not know why they were there. There is always more to discover in our own woodlands!
Thank you Deb. You’re very lucky to have trails on your own land. I’d think, why go anywhere else?
Even after you’ve walked a trail countless times you’ll still see things you didn’t see previously.
Most of the frost cracks I see have healed over and they’re really interesting!
Yes, the beauty is there at all times of the year. Always worth the trip out. I love the brocade moss!
Thanks Montucky! It’s always nice to see the green of moss in winter.
The longer days are most welcome.
I agree, the more the better.
I enjoyed walking with you this evening, Allen. I also enjoy solitude and a walk on my own when I can follow my nose and wander at will is an absolute joy. I loved the golden reflections and the stained glass windows you found.
Thank you Clare. I’m sure solitude must be easy to find there.
Always nice to walk in the woods. Such a beautiful place.
Thank you Chris, I agree!
“Not much time, but when you live in the woods you don’t have to go far.” Yes, and that’s how I feel when I go into my backyard. Always so much to see, even though we only have an acre.
You can fit a lot of interesting things on an acre!
You really can!
I enjoyed learning about the Pine Tree Riot! And your lovely photos as always.
Thanks very much Cathy!
You’re so right: when the days get longer, it’s such a treat. We had gale-force winds here over the weekend – it was very loud and powerful, and I kept looking at the trees, but so far, they seem to have held strong.
Thank you Cynthia. Yes, the time changes here a week from this Sunday and I’m really looking forward to it.
We had the same winds you did and they set records here. I didn’t see many trees down either and thankfully there wasn’t much power loss.
Thank you (again!) for sharing all of Nature’s beauty that you find. I understand about soitude too, I like to go out in the woods and find a rock to sit on and just enjoy the forest sights and sounds.
Ahhh, yes, the joys of solitude! How well I understand. I love the stained glass in your cathedrals and your rivers of molten gold 😊. Nice walk. Thank you.
“I hope you’ll have a chance to get out and see it.”
Thank you. I shall. (Or that’s the plan. 🙂 )
Thank you Ben, I’m glad to hear it!
🙂
Thank you for the interesting details from nature. Are there also bears in your woods?
You’re welcome. Yes, we have black bears here and I’ve had them in my yard a few times. They’ll be waking up before too much longer.
Thanks for taking us on your walk, lovely to get the pictures of what you notice as you meander from side to side.
You’re welcome!