
We’re having another one of those strange, almost snowless winters so far this season but even though it hasn’t been snowy it has been cold enough for ice to form, so in early December I decided to visit a stream near my neighborhood. Last year I found beautiful lacy ice all along it but this time as you can see, there was no ice.

There was frost on the lawns, so I thought for sure there would be ice on the stream.

A little neighborhood pond had a thin film of ice on it.

But there was little to no ice to be found here at the stream. No matter; there are always interesting things to see, like this pronounced meander in the stream. When I first started coming here it was nothing like this but over the years flooding has dumped a lot of sand and gravel in a pile over there on the left, forcing the stream to move more and more to the right. As it moves it washes soil away from tree roots and many trees have fallen.

I stopped to admire some beech leaves. The beech is a tree that gives beauty to the forest all year long.

I also saw some colorful turkey tail fungi on a stump. Part of their scientific name is versicolor, and it’s a good one. I’ve seen these come in pink, orange, blue, purple, and everything in between. They’re one of the most colorful fungi I know of and winter is a good time to find them. As far as I know no one has ever discovered what causes their many variations in color.

I looked back to where I had come from and saw how the stream meander is slowly cutting into the hillside and washing it away; a mountain slowly turning to sand. I thought the low sun falling on the green plants was a beautiful scene. It showed how, around every corner, there is the very real possibility of finding staggering beauty of the kind we’ve never seen. We need to learn to stop and let the beauty of life seep into us until it fills every part of our being; until the word Hallelujah comes to us naturally, without a thought.

One of the things I come here to see are the tree mosses. When I first started coming here there was a group of maybe ten plants right at the water line but now, they have grown away from the stream and there are hundreds of them. They must like wet ground because this place floods regularly and they often spend part of their life underwater. They’re beautiful little things and I’d like to see them in more places but so far this is the only place I’ve ever found them.

This unknown creature grew on a tree and though I was sure I had seen it before I couldn’t remember its name. It looks almost like a crustose lichen with an area of something else growing through it but I can’t imagine what that something else would be. In the end I decided it didn’t matter. Memories are like dogs that come when you call them but otherwise lie silent and still. Sometimes they don’t come at all, and seem so far off I can’t tell if they are even there anymore. The effort it takes to recall them doesn’t seem worth whatever limited value they may have. They are like things stored in the attic; not worth climbing the stairs to see, but seemingly still too precious to throw away. They sit gathering dust but one day they will have to go, so why bother adding to the pile by gathering up more of them? Let each day start fresh and shining brightly, unobscured by the film of dust that is yesterday.

This is a two-part post; what you’ve seen so far happened one day and what you will see from here on happened on another. Luckily the sun was shining brightly on both days. I would have loved to have been able to see it the way this NASA photo shows it.

On the second day I went to the stream, about three weeks later, there was ice. Strangely though, at nearly 40 degrees F. this day was warmer than the first.

Last winter when I came here, I found beautiful, lacy ice covering the surface of the stream but this year I saw mostly splash ice. Splash ice forms when running water splashes droplets up on cold surfaces, where they freeze almost immediately. It can be beautiful; all of what we see here is splash ice.

Ice curtains along the banks showed how the water level had dropped, with ribbons of ice forming at each different level.

This view is looking down on ice similar to that in the previous photos.

This ice sculpture grew on a twig that hung out over the stream.

This very thin, clear pane of ice had water droplets hanging from its underside.

This ice reminded me of the bullseye glass windowpanes you can still see in very old houses. Before modern glass making came along glass windowpanes were blown from a gob of molten glass that was spun at the end of the blowpipe until it formed a large disc. Rectangular windowpanes were cut from the disc with the outer, thinner, clearer panes sold to the wealthy and the inner, thick, wavy panes with the pontil mark bullseye in the center sold to the poor. You couldn’t see anything out of them but they did let in light and that was what was important. I can’t even guess how this ice would have formed to look just like them.

Neither can I explain why this bit of dead grass had a ray of sunlight falling on it.

I’ve heard that very white ice is white because it has a lot of oxygen in it, so maybe all the bubbles in this piece go along with that theory. It must have gotten very cold very quickly to freeze bubbles in place.

The only thing you can expect from ice is the unexpected, because no two pieces will ever be alike. Ice helps teach us that we should go into nature with no expectations and just enjoy what we see.

On the way home this scene looked more like March than December. Now into January without plowable snow in my yard, it looks to be another unusual winter. I hope you enjoyed coming along through the snowless woods. In a normal winter we wouldn’t have been able to go without snowshoes.
The wise man knows that it is better to sit on the banks of a remote mountain stream than to be emperor of the whole world. ~ Zhuangzi (c. 369 BC – c. 286 BC)
Thanks for coming by.
An unusual winter but still so beautiful. And an excellent quote at the end of your post. A remote stream is where the world and dreams come together 🙂 Cheers to a great ’23 ahead.
Thank you, I agree. You’ll see a lot of water in these posts.
I hope this new year is good to you. Happy Travels.
As always I enjoyed the walk. But I did laugh at letting the old memories lie in my upstairs attic because in my upstairs attic the old memories are so bright and sharp and this morning is a bit of a fog. Also enjoyed seeing the unexpected -in the ice picture below the one of the white ice, if you look just below the floating dark leaf, there is the image of a butterfly patterned in the ice. A very unexpected juxtaposition. and bringing another smile.
Thank you. It’s the useless memories I bemoan. Some are heavy, some nagging, etc. Why cling to them?
One of the things I like about photographing ice is when I get home and look at them it kicks my imagination into high gear. I’m glad it happens to you, too!
I really enjoyed your photos especially the ice pattern ones. Art created by man can be so beautiful but no one can create art more beautifully than nature! And it’s a gift to be able to capture that beauty. Thank you!
You’re welcome, Ann. I’m glad you like what you find here.
Thank you for a lovely post, both in words and pictures. Now that I am retired I can enjoy my surrounding beauty every day…something I enjoy and value.
Best wishes to you, and may 2023 bring many more walks and blog posts.
You’re welcome. I’m glad you will have more time for exploring. You just really never know what you might see.
I hope 2023 will be kind to you as well. I plan on spending most of it exploring the woods and fields.
Beautiful captures… nature never disappoints!
Thanks Eliza. No, it really never does, does it? It seems like our little secret, but I hope not!
I thought that your answer to the comment of Ginger Wells-Kay was most interesting in the light of this post. I am really pleased that you are getting enhanced enjoyment from your walks now that you don’t feel that you have to remember everything. The moss and ice pictures were absolutely excellent so I hope that your skill in taking good photographs remains a pleasure for you and not a burden.
Thank you. No, taking photos is something I’ll never stop doing, apparently. I did it the whole time I wasn’t blogging.
People don’t realize, I’m sure, that for every flower photo seen on this blog there were ten or twelve more showing the back of the flower, how it joined the stem, if the stem was hairy or smooth, leaf shape and position on the stem, and all of the other important features needed for identification. And of course you have to carry all the memories of what to look at and how to do all of that around in your head. Then you have to come home and look through plant guides for hours, days, or sometimes weeks before you have a good identification. I’ll still love the flowers, but I won’t miss all of that!
You certainly provided a lot of useful information in your time and you equally certainly deserve a rest.
Yes, I think I need one.
I love the bits of minutiae gathered by reading your posts, and this one’s no exception. So interesting and curious about the early glass for windows. Keep doing what you do, cuz you do it so well! Beautiful ice pics.
Don’t forget, more poetry please 🙂 Have you given any thought to doing some little videos in your posts?? I’m quite demanding, huh?
All the bulbs that poked up over the last ten or so days of warmth here in western Maryland will have to retreat now as winter reasserts itself.
Thanks Ginny. I’m the king of factoids, I suppose, but I just find everything so darned interesting, you know?
I never have done a video but someday maybe.
I would never, ever call myself a poet. In fact I never really understood poetry until just over the past few years.
As of right now, I never sit down to “write a poem.” They just happen, and when they come I write them down. It’s a kind of magic that only happens now and then, so I can’t really say much about them, other than I have one or two set aside that I’m sure will reach the blog eventually. It’s funny, a year ago I never would have dreamed of putting poetry on this blog.
I don’t like to hear that your bulbs are already up. I’ve been afraid that will happen here because the ground hasn’t even frozen yet! I’m hoping a confused skunk doesn’t come along and dig them up, too. I’m really looking forward to seeing those flowers!
What a beautiful winter walk along a stream, Allen! It won’t be long before the spathes of skunk cabbage emerge. I enjoy your writing as much as the woodland photos.
It is a strange winter here, too.
Thank you Lavinia. You’re right, in a while skunk cabbages will announce the arrival of spring, no matter what the calendar says.
I hope you’re getting at least plenty of rain there, if not increasing the snow pack. Snow seems to be becoming just another memory here.
We are getting some good rain from the atmospheric rivers of moisture coming up.
Good, I’m glad!
Your emails bring beauty and serenity into my life. Please don’t stop.
Thanks Jerry, I appreciate you saying so.
I really like your thoughts about memories. I suppose they especially ring true for folks like us of a certain age. They certainly resonate for me. I also like the ice that looks like bullseye glass. When I was a kid, I had a paper route that covered Church street and Lincoln street among others. There were quite a few older houses and I remember a few that had bullseye glass panels in the front doors that, as you say, people couldn’t really see in or out of, but they did let the light in. I had assumed the opposite, the these were a nice decorative choice that likely cost more than ‘plain old glass’. I had no idea that it was an artifact of the old style glass making process. Grateful that I still get to live and learn.
Thanks Dave. Some memories are totally useless and then there are others that we pay attention to only occasionally, like a favorite old book. Then there are some that haunt us. Do you see anything worth saving here? Me neither.
Many of those older houses are still standing, I’d bet. Maybe someday I’ll walk that area and see if I can see any old glass. It gets rarer all the time it seems, but salvage yards are probably full of it.
I would say that my more pleasant and most often visited memories involve our four legged companions. Although I sure am grateful for the ones that remind me not to do some stupid thing again! Now if I could only remember why I just walked all the way across the house to the back room. I suppose if I just go back to what I was doing, it’ll surely come to me. I’m just glad we don’t have stairs in this house. And oh by the way… Happy New Year my friend.
Thanks for the laugh, and the same to you!
A post of discovery and wonder. And your thoughts about memories are beautiful. Happy new year to you.
Thank you Cynthia, and the same to you!
I love this:
“We need to learn to stop and let the beauty of life seep into us until it fills every part of our being; until the word Hallelujah comes to us naturally, without a thought.”
Thank you so much for sharing your photos, observations, knowledge, and above all, your love for and appreciation of nature.
Appreciatively,
Susan ________________________________
Thank you Susan. I try to live those words, so I know it’s possible. And I most certainly do love nature, and I have a feeling you do too!
I loved this whole blog but if I had to pick one nugget – why? If a deranged terrorist held a revolver to my head – I would choose your description of bullets eye glass which made me put my phone down and ponder the ways of the world
I hope a deranged terrorist never does that! Bullseye glass is very interesting. I’m not sure where you live but if you ever get to a re-created colonial village you should ask to see it. If they’re worth their salt they’ll have some!
You are indeed a wise man. And thank you for sharing that wisdom.
I don’t know about that Robin, but I do thank you for thinking so.
Beautiful moss and amazing ice. Our landscape is white right now but it melted on the asphalt so there was no cleanup which was nice but strange. With the warmish weather, I’ve wondered about the ice fishermen this year and whether they will get a chance to enjoy their hobby. Happy New Year, and thanks for the great photos and explanations.
Thanks Judy. I’ve seen some ice fisherman in the area but I’m not sure I would have been out there. The ice isn’t looking good.
I’m glad you didn’t have to shovel. It was the same here-maybe an inch or two of white rain.
Happy New Year to you too! I hope it’s a good one for you.
Understand why you need(ed) to stop blogging, but have to somewhat selfishly say I am so glad to read your last few post-hiatus offerings. Writings and photos so beautiful, meditative, revealing, instructional, often quirky or humorous – very much missed. I also refer to your past blogs for plant identification purposes. Anyway, thank you so much for sharing your thoughts, feelings, knowledge, and photography over the years. Be well.
Thanks very much. I don’t think people know how much baggage you have to carry around if you are to accurately identify plants, fungi and lichens. You have to retain an incredible amount of information and know what to look for on nearly everything you see. A big part of my taking a break from blogging was so I could stop this, and shed all the memories that I’d had to carry around for so long. Spending 3 months walking through the woods without having to identify anything seems to have freed me. All of the memories of what to look for on this or that plant are still there but I no longer need to cling to them, and there is a great sense of freedom in that.
Good to be free! Or at least as free as we can manage.
Yes. A clear, free mind is worth more than memories to me.
What lovely images of scenes most would pass by and only think how bleak it looked. Those folks miss so much. Thanks for sharing what you keen and artful eyes see, along with some relevant science and literature to correspond. I always learn something when I read your posts. It definitely has been an odd winter here in NH, but then again it’s hard to say what’s weird anymore! Be well, ~Ruth
You’re welcome Ruth. I agree, “normal” seems to no longer apply to seasons and changing conditions.
I also agree that people who just hurry on by miss the possibility of incredible beauty, every moment. If only they knew!
Four expensively plowable inches on my hill in Hancock, covering the remainder of the last snowfall, also plowable. This ain’t Nashua!
Well, I suppose I should be glad that I no longer work in Hancock!
Thanks for starting my day wondering what I’ll find….today, it will be beneath the snow!
Did you get a lot of snow? We barely had a couple of inches and I think most of that has melted.
I haven’t stopped to look for a while, but I am glad I did today. Your stories of ice, bullseye glass and the like, are so interesting. Beautiful quote at the end. thank you!
Thank you Nancy, and welcome back.
Thank YOU! I’ve always enjoyed your photos and commentary, and I’m glad I returned. Not sure what kept me away….certainly not you and your stories and photos.
Keep them coming! thanks!
You’re welcome. I stopped blogging for a while so maybe that had something to do with it.