I must say that I truly enjoyed my walkies today . . . especially compared to the last few days with arctic North wind biting through layers of clothes, chilling the warm water in your aluminum bottle in less than five minutes, and numbing your fingers and toes so much you wonder if you might get frostbite.
But not today.
Today was sunny, and much warmer than the previous few days, even with a stiff NW wind. I walked a little later than normal, and with it being a Saturday, there were more people on the trail.
--one woman wearing ear buds, who looked like she was about to keel over with a heart attack
--two bikers (separately) head down and focused on logging the miles
--two kids on bikes (together)
--pair of female joggers, talking
None of them saw or heard anything nature provided.
But I did.
--I heard the rhythmic sound of a beaver gnawing wood.
--the chitter and bark of a squirrel
--the caw of a mockingbird
--I saw an owl, head tucked low into its wings as it blended into the dead branch it sat on
--I saw a small flock of paired mallards (@ 8) floating on the marshy water in the open bowl near the creek
--another flock of paired bluebirds (@ 10), sunning and eating on the south-facing slope of the expressway. The bright flash of blue as the males took to the air closely followed by their drab brown mates
--The motionless Great Blue Heron as it stood in the shallow creek near the beaver den.
None of those on the trail saw or heard what I did, because they weren't observing life around them. Their focus was inward or within the small bubble of energy surrounding them.
The beauty of nature is all around us in the city. You just have to open your eyes and observe. Take the time to tune out the roar of the cars on the highways or pick up the trash that has blown or drained into the green belts.
Nature and life will always find a way to survive.
Showing posts with label morning walkies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morning walkies. Show all posts
1/14/12
12/20/11
Caught!
spies me, blinks twice, and flies away
on soft, silent wings
I'm not a poet . . . wait for it . . . and I know it.
But I've been playing with Haiku recently. Today's walk gave me the perfect opportunity to try one out. Traditionally, haiku has a 5, 7, 5 pattern, but Japanese on isn't quite the same as syllables. But I tried my best.
I looked this owl up in my Bird Field Guide, and I believe I got the right name. I had to paste the picture on Paint to enlarge it enough to see its markings, but the yellow beak was a give away.
I wonder what's in store for my walk tomorrow . . .
Later, Peeps!
12/4/11
Beaver Brothers at it again.
Here's a quick pictorial from my morning walkies on Saturday. Though overcast and cloudy, the sky was totally different than the day before, full of texture and color with breaks of cerulean blue.
I'll admit that I walk the same path daily (see the strip of white below the hotel? That's the path), but it isn't always the same. That is what is so wonderful about nature, always changing. One of the three highways is pictured (the building in the pic is a hotel), the second highway is to my right and the third is at my back. The grove of trees border a tributary creek. Somewhere along this creek my beaver buddies live.
This was the original evidence that the beavers had returned. This picture was taken near the hotel in the previous pictures.
That poor little tree has become this. :-) They finished the job of taking down the tree, and though you can't see it in this picture, there are branches missing. They have started gnawing off branches to make a den or dam . . . or simply because their teeth needed honing down.
Who knows what goes on in a little beaver mind?
Not far from the downed tree, under the creepy bridges, I found these tracks. For all I know about critter prints, these could be from raccoons and not beavers, but they're cute aren't they?
Oh, what are the creepy bridges?
Since these three highways intersect, there are numerous interchanges. Behind the trees in the picture with the hotel are the creepy bridges. The path does a hairpin turn of probably about 180 degrees. It runs straight beneath the two, double-laned bridges, but you can't see around either corner. You can't hear anyone coming from either direction, due to location AND the loud noise of the cars whizzing by. Definitely creepy. A good place to hide a body creepy. I keep my nunchuck water bottle handy along with my pepper spray.
And backtracking to the original picture (away from the hotel) we go under another highway (brighter, airier and seriously less creepy!) and we have to cross the creek. A few years ago, the city put in the bridge to connect the walking trails. I'm sincerely glad because if you wanted to cross the old way, you had to hop, skip and jump across using wobbly rocks! I'm taking this picture from between the rails.
Look at the tree in the center of the picture. Notice the lighter blond wood at the bottom. Yep, my beaver friends are at it again on a new tree. I tried to find the area where they are building their home, but suspect it's near the boggy part of the creek. That's where it was before, hidden from prying eyes and the sounds of the highway are muffled.
I think that's where I would live--if I were a beaver, that is.
Later, Peeps!
Facing west |
The triangular bowl between highways--north |
This was the original evidence that the beavers had returned. This picture was taken near the hotel in the previous pictures.
That poor little tree has become this. :-) They finished the job of taking down the tree, and though you can't see it in this picture, there are branches missing. They have started gnawing off branches to make a den or dam . . . or simply because their teeth needed honing down.
Who knows what goes on in a little beaver mind?
Not far from the downed tree, under the creepy bridges, I found these tracks. For all I know about critter prints, these could be from raccoons and not beavers, but they're cute aren't they?
Oh, what are the creepy bridges?
Since these three highways intersect, there are numerous interchanges. Behind the trees in the picture with the hotel are the creepy bridges. The path does a hairpin turn of probably about 180 degrees. It runs straight beneath the two, double-laned bridges, but you can't see around either corner. You can't hear anyone coming from either direction, due to location AND the loud noise of the cars whizzing by. Definitely creepy. A good place to hide a body creepy. I keep my nunchuck water bottle handy along with my pepper spray.
And backtracking to the original picture (away from the hotel) we go under another highway (brighter, airier and seriously less creepy!) and we have to cross the creek. A few years ago, the city put in the bridge to connect the walking trails. I'm sincerely glad because if you wanted to cross the old way, you had to hop, skip and jump across using wobbly rocks! I'm taking this picture from between the rails.
Look at the tree in the center of the picture. Notice the lighter blond wood at the bottom. Yep, my beaver friends are at it again on a new tree. I tried to find the area where they are building their home, but suspect it's near the boggy part of the creek. That's where it was before, hidden from prying eyes and the sounds of the highway are muffled.
I think that's where I would live--if I were a beaver, that is.
Later, Peeps!
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