
We’ve had more ice than snow here so far this winter and if there is one thing that will strike fear into the most winter hardened New Englander, it is an ice storm. Trees, weighed down by ice, fall and take wires down with them, and there have been times here when the power has been out for weeks. No power when it’s cold means you move, unless you happen to have a non electric heat source or a generator. In any event I wanted to take a walk after a recent ice storm because though terrible, on a sunny day ice can also be beautiful.

The trouble was, there wasn’t much sunshine to make the ice sparkle like prisms, and instead of clear and beautiful some of the ice was kind of slushy, as the ice on this beaver cut tree shows.

This clear, hard ice covered every exposed twig and branch but luckily, I saw only a few that had fallen. There was no sunlight to make it sparkle.

Even the beech leaves had a coating of ice, and that made them even more beautiful. Simple, everyday natural beauty is available to everyone at any time but we can’t just look. We need to see.

That’s ice, not a water droplet. Sometimes it seemed like every living thing must be coated in ice on this day.

This puddle ice was unusual. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a puddle do that.

The sun and clouds just couldn’t decide who would win out and I found that trying to time my shutter clicks to when the sun did shine was fighting a losing battle so I just enjoyed the day, sun or clouds.

Pretty little goldthread (Coptis groenlandicum) leaves grew in a crook made by pine roots. You wouldn’t think such a tender looking plant would be evergreen but they are. In spring the leaves are a bright, glossy lime green but darken as they age and by winter will often be very dark green. They’ll hold their color under the snow all winter and look similar to wild strawberries until late April or early May when new leaves and small white flowers will appear. Goldthread gets its common name from its thread like, bright yellow roots.

I saw a single small jelly crep growing on a log. 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. When they grow in groups, they grow with an overlapping shelving habit like shingles.

Here are the jelly crep’s gills. This mushroom was only about half an inch across so this was a tough shot to get.

A small bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum) somehow remained ice free. Determination, I thought.

There was sunlight at the end of this tree tunnel.

If you follow the trail long enough you find the closeness of the forest opens up into quite a large expanse of wetland, which is home to fish, frogs, beavers, herons and other critters. I’ve seen some beautiful sunsets right here in this spot as well. I’m glad there are laws that prevent the filling in of wetlands now. When I was a boy, I saw load after load of concrete rubble and just about anything else you can think of dumped into wetlands to fill them so they could be built on.

The stream in the previous photo goes under a road and though it looked like spring on that side of the road I found winter on this side. It seemed odd to have such a change happen over such a short distance.

This is the only gray birch I’ve ever seen with inner bark that color. It is beautiful and so bright, the first time I saw it I thought it was a plastic marker. I was glad that it wasn’t.

There was quite a large clear spot under some pine trees and I knew what that meant.

The pine’s branches had taken on the weight of the ice. This is why limbs break off and take down power lines. Ice can be very destructive.

I looked at the gray birches (Betula alba var. populifolia) in a small grove to see if all the seeds had been eaten yet.

There were quite a few left but they were being eaten. Ripe female catkin-like strobiles like the one seen here resemble small cones. Fruit (seeds) are blown about by the wind in late fall and winter. Unless that is, birds get to them. Many songbirds love them. You can often find the snow under a gray birch littered with hundreds of tiny winged seeds. Seeds can persist for years in the soil and will grow if the soil is disturbed.

I wanted to show you a gray birch seed so I brought home a strobile and put a single seed on a white background. They are very small and I couldn’t think of anything to compare them to, so I put a period on the paper with a blue pen. Each tree must produce hundreds of thousands of these seeds, which are technically called nutlets.

This is a gray birch catkin. A true catkin is really just a long string of small flowers spiraling around a central stem, and these will open in May.

I saw what looked like a stream through the woods but it was actually a giant puddle. Quite a beautiful reflecting pool, I thought.

Their deep warm color, the shine of their icy coating, and the the way that the soft light falling on them seemed to caress them made these oak leaves a thing of great beauty. As I’ve said before; if you can find joy in the simple things in life, joy will follow you wherever you go. These beautiful leaves certainly put a smile on my face on such an icy day.
By walking in a snowy forest you can really forget about this world, and every time you forget about this world you leave this world, and every time you leave this world you gain a very special wisdom that does not exist in this world. ~Mehmet Murat ildan
Thanks for coming by.
I remember many a New England ice storm. We have had a few here in our part of Oregon, but they are nothing like New England’s icy weather. I enjoyed your beautiful selection of photos. Your compositions are outstanding.
Thank you. It sounds like snow, rain and ice here tomorrow so winter isn’t over yet.
Again great post, this time of year I always wonder what you will show us. It is always something interesting. The oaks leafs are so warm and beautiful. But then the puddle was nice, and the Goldthread beautiful.
We have gotten a lot of snow in the last three days. Schools and some businesses have been closed for three days. I had two walks today, and at both parks it was slow going with snow up to my knees! The trees were covered with 8 inches of fresh snow overnight and the sun was out.
Thanks Chris! Your walks sound beautiful and I hope you’ll do a blog post about them. Snowy trees, blue sky, sunshine, any photo will be good!
We had snow here today too and wow, was it slippery! The snow was mealy and didn’t enhance the trees much, so I just stayed in for a change.
I agree with Susan, I’m glad wetlands are protected these days, it has taken a while for Australians to realise how precious our wetlands are.
While we were visiting friends in Washington there was an ice-storm. I’ll never forget the damage that it caused (power out all week etc) but at the same time, such beauty in those the frozen leaves and trees etc.
Best wishes for a happy and healthy New Year!
Thank you Gerry. I’m glad the powers that be in Australia have seen the light.
I think I know how your friends felt. In an ice storm you don’t know whether to cry or be totally drawn into the beauty.
Thank you for the best wishes. I’ll return the same!
Another post packed with interest. The little fungus is amazing (and a very good picture) but the difference in the stream on the two sides of the bridge was the most intriguing thing.
Thank you. I was surprised when I looked at the stream on the other side of the bridge. There wasn’t really anything there to shade it but it was still iced over. You solve one mystery in nature and there are 5 or 6 more to take its place.
At least 5 or 6 as far as I am concerned. 🙂
I really like that first photo. The beech leaves seem all lit up, even with no sunlight.
Thanks Dave. That’s why I love beech trees. At any time of year they can be beautiful.
I love how, in the opening shot, the evergreens provide a dark backdrop that makes the beech leaves just look bold and bright. And when you described the jelly crep as being like your earlobe, I wonder how many readers reached up to feel their earlobe, haha. Another great qoute, too. Stay warm and be careful as you go treking about in the winter woods.
Thanks Ginny! That’s why I love beech trees. They’re beautiful at all times of year.
I always feel my own earlobe, just to make sure I know what I’m talking about!
I have spikes I wear when it’s icy so I’m usually okay as long as I don’t trip. Which I do occasionally.
I heard you had quite a lot of snow down your way. I hope you were able to deal with it without too much trouble.
That snow stayed south of us here in Hagerstown, but a mere 60 miles south my son got upwards of 12″. We got not one flake, which was fine with me!
It sound like the person most able to shovel got to do so!
I bought a snow blower this year and haven’t had to use it once. I wonder if I buy a lawnmower in spring if I’ll have to mow.
THANK YOU for these particularly beautiful views .. my late husband and I lived in the bush so ICE STORMS were viewed as spectacular but also a time to be very very careful.
Thank you Krys. Yes, I’ve seen trees covered with ice so beautiful it was like being inside a prism, but at the same time entire towns were without power. Terrible and beautiful all at the same time.
Those are some lovelypictures. It’s so true – “we can’t just look. We need to see.” Those are words to live by. Your puddle looks like it has a tiger’s face.
Thank you Su. I see what you mean about the puddle! That’s great and I thank you for pointing it out!
When I found that a back lot I bought at the town’s auction for back taxes (long abandoned by heirs of heirs, etc.) runs into an old beaver pond, I was thrilled!
The next time there’s an ice storm, don’t forget to check out the staghorn sumac! I think you said there’s some across the road from you? Trees all around can be bent or broken, but the sumac will still be standing proud.
I’d be thrilled to own a beaver pond too, Georgette. You could sit and watch for years and not see all that happened.
Yes, I have staghorn sumac very near but I completely forgot to look at it. I might get another chance though. We seem to be seeing more ice than anything else and the roads were very bad this morning.
Terrible to even imagine “paving paradise to put up a parking lot…” Wish the wetland laws had been established many, many years earlier.
Thank you Lynne, I agree. When I was a boy we were quite ignorant of our impact on the environment and I’m very thankful for the scientific knowledge we’ve gained. Now, we can no longer use ignorance as an excuse.
I’m glad you were on the move because you got some stunning and interesting photos. And I am inclined to agree with you that the little fern was determined. Wishing you health and resilience to cope with whatever storms arrive.
Thank you Cynthia, and the same to you. I hope you aren’t having any serious ice storms there.
Not right now, but our weather tends to be similar, so fingers crossed that we won’t!
We’re hoping not!
Like you I am glad that wetlands are protected nowadays, wonderful winter pictures thank you.
Thank you. Yes, wetlands are an important part of the ecosystem and passing the laws protecting them are one of the smartest things we ever did, in my opinion.