Saturday, December 14, 2013

Snow Glory

It's cold out, and Last Friday's snow still lingers on the ground.  I gather Barley's boots from the hearth and he comes to me, wagging his tail slowly and lifting his front paw.  When his boots are cinched, I suit up: boots, coat, scarf, hat, and two layers of gloves.  Then we're off, boots crunching through the snow as we head down to the hollow.

We follow an old path through the woods, marked heavily by deer tracks as well as our own footprints.  Where deer prints diverge from ours, Barley investigates, nose to the ground.



























The trail opens into the hollow and we pause, listening to the silence.  It seems to permeate everything until it's broken by a song bird and then by distant crows.  When we continue, a dry creek bed leads us through a broad valley, covered with dried remnants of last summer's wildflowers and on to the edge of the lake.



Barley wades in, boots and all, undeterred by a strip of ice that intersects the cove, 
eases into the frigid lake and treads water, pivoting slowly and taking in the whole scene.














































Then he's out.  He shakes, the motion starting at the tip of his tail and working forward to his nose. Suddenly, he's a race horse, running in a wide circle over the loamy soil and through the dried flowers. He was born for this.

Barley's a little like the birds of the air; he doesn't worry about what he's going to eat (Beneful Dog Chow) or wear (blue boots) or what's going to happen tomorrow.  We'd do well to have that kind of trust.




























Do not worry about your life, 
what you will eat or drink;
or about your body, what you will wear.
Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes?

Look at the birds of the air; 
they do not sow or reap or store away in barns,
and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. 

Jesus/Matthew 6:25, 26



Linking with




Sunday, December 8, 2013

Hunger

Click on any photo for a larger view.


After waiting 'til March last winter for a decent snow,

we got an early start this year.

Sleet came down most of the day Thursday,

covering the ground with tiny styrofoam like pellets,

and Friday's snow piled on top.





When the thermometer headed down, 

we found our appetites sitting on the high side of the teeter-totter.  

We weren't alone.  









The corn and sunflower seeds we feed the creatures 

disappeared almost as fast as we could toss them out.





Blue jays wore their heads on backwards...





and Cardinals perched near the feeders like Christmas ornaments,

waiting for their number to come up.





Fox sparrows thought nothing of the cold, knocking the snow out of their way with swift kicks.





The crows were emboldened to come close to feed, even perching on the deck.










Barley's appetite stays at its peak year round...





























but his energy soars when the snow comes.



While all the creatures outdoors have voracious appetites,

so do we.

Pass the popcorn, please.





Linking with Wild Bird Wednesday
and Saturday's Critters







Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Survivors




Since Thanksgiving, 

wild turkeys have been emboldened to come around close to the house.

I heard a soft clucking this morning, 

and glanced up from my desk to see two hen turkeys

on the patio outside my studio window.





This one looked a little accusing,

 and I wondered if she could possibly know about all those leftovers in the fridge.





The red squirrel seemed to think it was no big deal.  

But then, when's the last time anybody's had squirrel for Thanksgiving?





Linking with Wild Bird Wednesday



Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Hawk ID
































On a cold gray yesterday, there was a visitor in our yard.  Perched on a rock that tops a tall stump, we could have mistaken it for a statue, had it not been for the occasional turn of the head.  It was only there briefly, before effortlessly, it glided into the woods.

Hope one of you birders can help us with identifying this bird.



Linking with Wild Bird Wednesday