Showing posts with label sedges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sedges. Show all posts

November 23, 2020

Secret Places and Simple Pleasures

trail 1

Recently the dog and I hiked at one of our favorite places. Several things about this location are special, starting with the fact that I wouldn't have known this beautiful place existed if I didn't have a dog. It's a designated dog trail at a Wisconsin state park near my house. When the park's other trails are closed during the cross-country skiing season, this trail remains open to dogs and hikers. While I've hiked at the state park many, many times over the years, I didn't discover this particular path until last winter!

Every time I've visited this trail since January, it has revealed new gems of beauty.

trees

During our recent mid-November hike here, I found myself awed by the mature trees that line the trail.

ferns

Ferns, mosses, lichens, and sedges are still evergreen among the carpet of Oak leaves.

trail 2

A particularly magical patch of the trail is hard to describe in photos and words, but I'll try: It's a little opening, about 3/4 of the way through the path, where the woodland opens into a meadow. My impression is that this section illustrates the movement of the glacier that formed the nearby lake.

woodland hill

On one side of the trail, there's a hill that appears to be a glacial drumlin.

meadow and lake

On the other side of the trail, at the woodland opening, there's a beautiful meadow with a view of the lake. One senses how the retreating glacier formed this area.

seedheads and trees

The light is magical in this meadow--in all seasons, but particularly in spring and autumn and late afternoon, as the oblique light hits the grasses, sedges, wildflowers, and seedheads.

meadow

On this recent day at the park, the sky was beautiful, too. Seedheads of asters, goldenrods, and other autumn-blooming plants were sparkling--backlit by the low-hanging sun.

seedheads 2

seedheads 1

sun

meadow view

I love this place. I'm thankful I discovered it, and I'm thankful that Nicky and I can walk here just about any day we wish. Simple pleasures are so important during a global pandemic. I hope you all are finding simple pleasures, and I wish for those who celebrate it, a very Happy Thanksgiving!

January 20, 2015

Finding Garden Treasures During the January Thaw

snow

How does a hardy Wisconsin gal prepare for a garden walk-around on a mild day during a January thaw?

window view

First, she looks out the upstairs window and surveys the landscape.

"Frankly, it looks kinda blah," she says to herself.

"Then again, the snow is mostly melted. Maybe there's something fun to discover out there ..."

boots

So, she slips on her heavy-duty snow boots ...

gear

Throws on a lightweight denim coat and gloves with fingers (for ease in operating her camera) ...

And begins to discover extraordinary beauty in very simple things.

lamium

Soft, evergreen Lamium plants under the receding snow.

sedge

A thriving sedge she transplanted into a pot last summer.

echinacea

Evidence that birds have gained sustenance from the Echinacea plants.

swing

The worn but welcoming backyard swing.

sedum

The surprisingly vivid glow of the dried Sedums.

moss

Amazing mosses thriving in their perfectly cool growing conditions.

buds

Buds on the Lilac bush waiting for their time to shine.

fungi

A long, decaying log covered in lacy fungi.

fungi2

Is this Trametes versicolor? Or Bjerkandera adusta? Something else? (I'm consulting with mycologists behind the scenes to find out.)

bench

Before she heads inside, she sits briefly on the bench at the back of the woods.

black oak

And as she approaches the house, she notices a large Black Oak leaf--larger than her hand. Why does this hefty, impressive leaf make her smile?

Perhaps because she feels so thankful for the great gift of a simple walk on a mild winter day.

Nature Notes on Rambling Woods