The sun has been shining the last two days. Soft white, feathery streaks of clouds drift above me in that blue, blue sky. I sent out a few pictures to a local weatherman, and asked him what type of clouds I was seeing? His answer:
“The straight lines appear to be jet contrails that are starting to feather out because they’re getting old. There also appear to be high cirrus clouds as well.” I slip past you Riding the sky Short wavelengths Dip me in bright blue Pictures in white, form My Walking Path on the wind.. What do you see, when you look up? *Tag: coyotes
Winters Bite Can Really Hurt~
I lost all feeling in my fingers by the time I reached the beginning of the back path.
I was hoping the water was still running strong. Then this walk would be cut short and I could slip back into the warm house.
The water looked solid… Darn!
I used my ski pole and poked at the ice at my feet. Today the air was dry, Mother Nature pulled the moisture out of the ground, leaving some of the ice hollow underneath.
I watched as Uriah stepped gingerly on the ice. He turned and looked at me. I could hear his thoughts. “See! I didn’t break through. It’s strong enough! Come on!”
I shrugged and started my slow shuffle over the slick ice.
Deciding I was too slow, Uriah came back to see what was taking me so long.
I tried waving at him to stop.
He didn’t listen.
I tried to baby talk him away…“No, no walk up ahead of me. Uriah don’t stand next to me!”
He just stopped and stared. First at my forehead, then at my pockets, he was hoping for a biscuit. He was looking at me, when the ice popped, then cracked loudly under our feet. All in a matter of seconds, Uriah’s eyes opened wide and looked like they would pop out of his head. Then he looked down at his paws, and then back up at me, just as the ice gave way under him.
Luckily, for both of us the water that settled underneath was only about two inches deep. But two inches of freezing water was too much me. Uriah, at the first popping sound started moving fast! He slipped on ahead aiming for the area with the dried grass. He knew if he stood on the grass, he wouldn’t get his feet wet.
I wasn’t so lucky. The ice gave out under me, and only the bottom of my shoes got wet. Relieved, I laughed! And started a slow shuffled towards Uriah.
“Nothing to worry about it’s not deep!” Famous last words…
Ten steps in and the ice broke again. This time, the water poured into my shoes.
I hurried to reach higher ground, the dried grass, not taking in to consideration that Uriah weighed a lot less than I did.
Heavy Sigh!
Uriah glared and whined! He lifted one paw at a time up, as my added weight sucked us both down into the icy, muddy water. The water freely poured over the top of the grass and sticks and my shoes.
Note* It wasn’t deep. If I had stood still it would have reached my ankles. *
Uriah turned away from me and raced up the path to the East. Home was to the west.
I checked on my camera. It was safely in its case hanging around my neck. My goal in coming out here today, was to take some pictures. With that in mind, I decided to continue on my frozen walk, and I headed up the path to the east.
I was hoping to find that Pheasant hiding in the trees. My imagination was working over time as I walked. Wet feet and frozen shoes, took my mind off my frozen fingers. At that point I pictured that Pheasant sipping a hot chocolate, with his feet up on an ottoman next to a roaring fire.
Yeap! I was hallucinating! And I would surly freeze to death under a tree.
Uriah had disappeared into the trees.
I could hear the ice cracking, in the low lying areas as I moved up the path and straight east. I tried to avoid the gentle, dangerously frozen wind, which was trying to knock my nose off.
The sun was shining brightly and the snow glittered white. The thaw we had, a few days ago, had taken away a large portion of the snow, the rest was frozen solid. I had a hard time punching my ski poles in the snow, in a laughable attempt to stay on my feet.
I could hear the sound of a little bird, but I couldn’t see him. Uriah gave up walking alone and came running up asking for a biscuit.
My fingers felt like they were no longer attached to the rest of my hand, as I dropped a biscuit out of my pocket.
Weather can be very deceptive and detached. That bright sunshine and blue sky would shine down on me as I froze, sitting under a tree.
I wanted a picture!
So I stopped and removed my gloves, and told Uriah to smile. He hid his face in the snow…
I only took a few pictures, I had to stop, because I couldn’t feel the on and off button. I slipped the camera in its case and told Uriah to run home. He took off into the trees instead.
At first I was aggravated then I realized it was probably warmer in those trees than out in the open.
I wasn’t going to trust the ice. So I plodded forward, over the low path and ice. I stepped once more into the water. By now my shoes were ice cubes! Literally, chunks of ice!
I hurried across the open yard! Uriah suddenly appeared right behind me; he didn’t complain as I opened the door to the house and ordered him inside. In my stylish ice shoes I clunked in behind him thinking, I need to toss out that Pheasant and drink his hot chocolate…
Uriah, Coyotes And A Wolf Moon~
It was close to eight o’clock when I stood outside in the drive way, waiting for my dog to do his business.
I looked up into the beautiful night sky. Smiled at the full moon and the sprinkling of stars- then I remembered my camera. I ran in the house, and ran back outside.
I clicked and adjusted the specs. The pictures looked like a big white fuzzy spot on black.
I turned off the camera and called to Uriah. I was standing at the door, when behind me the howling started. A stray sound that echoed across the snow covered fields. The coyotes were singing to the moon.
I hit the video button and crossed my fingers this works. Uriah complained a little. I thought I heard a train. Suddenly, one of the coyotes howled very close by, somewhere in the trees to the east of us. The fur on Uriah’s neck stood up and he made a movement towards the sound.
A few seconds later everything was very still.
It was very dark outside! This video is very hard to see! Please, turn your sound up.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPgU4j3RDrI
I woke up this morning with a cold. My head was pounding! My sinuses were stuffed! I would rather have sat, and not move at all.
But, Uriah needed to go for a walk.
I opened the door and told him to have fun, and sat back on the couch.
Uriah barked at the side door until I gave up and went outside.
Today was very clear and bright and extremely cold. Whites and blues, of snow and sky, stayed separate from the beiges and dark browns of the tree bark. Lines of color cut in and out of the blinding white snow.
This morning, the weatherman had made a joke about today’s temperatures, being as close to a heat wave as we can get in January. The past few days we had wind chills between -20 to -50 degrees. Hitting the twenty’s would have been a heat wave. If it had really gotten that high, it didn’t. And all this white is wonderful for my headache… Grumble, grumble… !
Uriah ran circles around me as soon as I stepped outside. Then he stared at my pockets. I reached in and pulled out a biscuit. At the same time, I accidentally dropped my stick of gum on the ground. I bent down to grab it.
Did I tell you, Uriah loves spearmint…
He grabbed it first and raced away from me. I tired out quickly. Then stood back and watched him run circles around a Blue Spruce, with my gum still intact, sticking out of his mouth.
I swatted the air at him. He plopped down in the snow and peeled off the paper. Then he chewed the gum a few times before he swallowed it. He looked longingly at the gum wrapper and promptly ate it…
Yesterday I didn’t walk out back. Within one day the line of footprints that I had made by dragging my feet through the deep snow, were gone. Completely filled in by the wind.
With a heavy sigh, a cough, and a sneeze I slowly followed two sets of fresh prints. One was a coyote a lot bigger than Uriah; he had stepped in and out of the snow easily. When Uriah walks, he wades through the snow dragging his chest along. Not the easy gait of a coyote.
The second set of prints, were from an even bigger deer. I stepped in the snow next to his footprints and only sunk in half the distance.
I followed the coyote’s trail, which moved in the same direction I was going. Except for when he ran around and underneath the old apple trees. I cheated there and cut my own path and linked up with his prints. I saw where he had dug irregular holes, here and there in the snow. Until he laid down just before the back path, and left a complete body print in the snow.
I saw a line of rabbit tracks that stretched out from the Bog Willows. Then move with even hops, towards the path. A little farther away, the snow was scattered, where the coyote and the rabbit both headed off into the trees. I looked up and saw Uriah’s hind end disappearing into the same section of trees.
I headed up the path going east. Just as I reached the section that broke off, with one side heading southeast, the other northeast. I stopped! My mind said, enough walking for today, tea time!
I whistled for Uriah. He surprised me by running out of the trees. He circled around me and headed back into the trees. He even jumped over branches with the agility of a puppy.
I told myself to enjoy the day like Uriah!
I looked upward into the taller trees. That was when I saw a slight movement, about twenty-five feet up, way-out on the edge of a heavy branch.
I blinked a few times until I focused on a dark brown Pheasant. He blended in completely with the branch and tree. I moved a few steps to the west and I could make out his long tail, it pointed west, his head to the east. As I walked away the entire Pheasant blended in with the lines of the tree. I saw no difference in the coloring of either bird or tree! I stared hard at him; I couldn’t find his slick purplish- blue head, only dark browns.
I could see he was starting to fidget.
I didn’t want to make him anymore nervous than I already had. I walked a few feet along the path, then turned back and said out loud, “You really think I could climb up there?”
Just then Uriah Howled!
I assumed he found the deer and would soon tire himself out. I trudged back to the house. Uriah beat me back. He got his biscuit and I was able to curl up on the couch with a cup of hot tea and a box of Kleenex…
Yesterday morning when I looked out the window I saw grays and whites, clouds and snow. A small section of the sky had a rolling cloud; it was unraveling in grayish-yellow sections in a futile attempt to filter down a ray of sunshine.
Without thinking I slipped on my gym shoes instead of my boots. I had packed the snow down on my walks, so the path we took no longer had me wading through deep drifts. Still it was a mistake to forget my boots. I figured that out when I was standing in the snow next to the apple trees up to my ankles.
I kept moving towards the path. I told myself that my feet wouldn’t get any warmer until I pulled on some heavier socks. That won’t happen until I have my morning coffee, and that isn’t even in my universe until Uriah was walked.
So I continued on…
I stopped on the path when I saw something clear and shining under the snow. Uriah hesitated, and watched me dust the snow off the ground. The ice was solid and window pane clear. Around it the ice swirled with white; it resembled a vase I had seen once. When I started to walk away, Uriah turned and disappeared between the trees.
I noticed that an animal had been digging little holes underneath the trees and around specific plants. I couldn’t figure out why, or what he would be after. I thought, maybe he smelled the rodents that burrowed tunnels under the snow. Except the holes only reached the frozen grass, and then he moved on to the next. The area was, too, trampled down for me to make out chipmunk tunnels under the snow.
I stopped along the southern fence line, every tree and bush was covered in a white haze.
Frost crystals!
Usually the crystals would melt if I breathed on them. This time, I exhaled like I was blowing out candles. When they didn’t melt, I began to wonder if my breath was warm enough.
I held onto one branch and looked very closely at the ice crystals; I wiped off a section from one small twig. As I watched, and this only took a few seconds, the ice crystals grew back.
I tried again to melt the crystals by exhaling on them. I watched the crystals melt. Then I watched them reform, not as pretty as the original ones, but still they grew in an upward fernlike spikes, called stellar dendrite.
I wished I had a magnifying glass to watch as the crystals grew. I never saw anything happen so fast!
The air was very damp and cold, a bitter cold. I wondered if that dampness was the cause the crystals grew so quickly.
I heard Uriah huffing angrily! He raced at me across the field! His hackles were up as he sniffed at my leg, checking me out. He walked around me once more making sure I was alright. He didn’t even ask for a biscuit. He stopped, sniffed the air and scrapped his back legs hard, the snow shot out behind him. Then, using his hound dog impression, Uriah looked up to the sky and barked. He set his nose to the ground and ran ahead of me, snorting angrily! He stopped and sniffed each of those little holes, with disgust!
I watched his dominance dance few seconds, and then I look out over the farmer’s field, towards the east, something moved, a coyote!
I whistled and the coyote stopped and laid down.
Coyotes, have responded to my whistle and my voice before, so this wasn’t a surprise. But, my feet were freezing and my legs burned from the cold air and I was ready to head home. Not chase Uriah over an open field…
I called for Uriah and the coyote sat up and listened…
He was waiting for us to leave.
I wanted my coffee so he wins…
*
*
*Picture from Word Clip ArtI noticed a hole, the size of a basket ball, directly under a Mulberry tree. A hodgepodge of animal tracks trailed over and around it. I stepped off the path to investigate.
My knit hat got caught up on the low hanging branches. I took it off and stuffed it in my pocket. The area under the tree was littered with rabbit tracks and leftovers from breakfast. Three corn cobs void of kernels and a dusting of seed hulls from the some dried field grass.
I leaned forward in an attempt to see how deep the hole was. “Must be a rabbit hole!” I muttered, and then I took a step back.
Not quite trusting it to be a rabbit hole…
From behind the trees a Ringneck Pheasant ran out. It hunkered down into the ground. With a little wiggle, it leaped upward and flew north. I was surprised he was able to become airborne so quickly.
Uriah had been walking head of me; he came running when the bird flew across the field. He had a happy doggy smile on his face. Then he looked at me questioningly.
I shrugged! He took that as a yes and ran off across the field to find the Pheasant.
I called out. “Good luck!” And I pulled my hat back on and looked around for more rabbit holes. “Don’t worry about me! I can fight off insane rabbits!” I muttered as I poked my ski pole into the snow. I really didn’t want to step into a rabbit or muskrat hole.
Uriah kept running and didn’t turn around. He was hot on that birds trail. Uriah was good at was following a scent. His eyes may be fading, but his sense of smell and his hearing is perfect. For years, Uriah had my neighbor duped into thinking he was nearly deaf.
Uriah has always been a teenager with selective hearing, especially if he doesn’t want to follow orders.
I carefully sidestepped back into the deep snow, then into my own footprints. I continued on with my walk.
I knew Uriah wouldn’t be able to catch that Pheasant. He never caught one before!
The only dog I had that could catch a healthy Pheasant was Samson. His father was a huge Black Lab and his mother was a Chesapeake Bay retriever, hunting was in his blood. Samson would never hunt and kill for fun, he enjoyed his birds alive.
Years ago in this very spot, Samson had pranced up to me with a Pheasant in his mouth. He was so proud of himself! He had caught a bird for me! He sat down in front of me, and gently placed the bird at my feet.
That bird hadn’t moved at all. I thought it may have died of a heart attack. I leaned forward to check on it, then it woke up and flew up into my face!
I fell backwards, as I pushed the bird away from my face!
The Pheasant fell to the ground! I thought I hurt it. I didn’t!
Immediately it jumped up and raced around me!
Samson leaned down to sniff it as it circled around in front of him. It did an awkward leap of faith up into the air and squeaked away at a low clumsily angle. It barely avoided hitting the ground, and flew straight into the heavier wooded area along the south end.
Pheasants are very clumsy birds; they would rather run than fly.
In the meantime, Samson sat quietly, and watched. Sort of! He kept lifting up his front paws up one at a time, like he was marching in place. But he stayed seated.
“He was alive!” When I spoke, Samson stood up and wagged his tail. “Well, that’s a good boy!” I grabbed his big velvety face in my hands and hugged him. He wiggled and danced around.
At that moment, Uriah and Zeus ran up behind us. They wanted in on the fun. As they barreled up, the Pheasant made an odd sound, somewhere between a squeak and a cat coughing up a hair ball. It echoed off and around the trees. That sound caught the attention of all three dogs. With a backward glance at me, they ran off to find it… again!
Memories… I wonder how much of their fun is imprinted on this land.
Smiling, I called out to Uriah. I waited and listened. This moment’s Pheasant made that odd sound somewhere in the trees.
I could hear Uriah, crunching branches as he moved towards the sound. “Uriah you won’t be able to find him!”
I waited again. Not a sound.
“Alright, even if you do find him, you won’t be able to catch him!” Still silence. “I know you can hear me!”
My feet were freezing, and the cold had gone through my pant legs. Time to head home! I shuffled over the ice and came out in the yard, where I waded into the deeper snow piled along the southern line of trees.
That was when Uriah came out of the trees.
Happy! But empty handed…or empty paws! His big eyes stared at my pocket, as he waited for his biscuit.
We both stopped when the Pheasant coughed in the trees…
I was hoping to write for this Blog every day. But I may get side tracked, like I did with this post. Sorry! Just a Note: I have to finish a synopsis I am working on, after that I need to work on my novel. I need to get it completed so I can start stacking up the rejection letters. I cleared a special place just for them!My daughter took this picture through the kennel’s chain link fence. She told me, it was the only way she could get them to stand still. Samson is to the left , Zeus to the right.
Hickory Dickory Dock~
I stared out the window at the icicles that clung to the screen, trailed down the deck’s railings and lengthened underneath the grill. The winds had smoothed out the snow. And I could see little birds jumping in-between the branches of the Blue Spruce on the south side of the deck.
Uriah was outside. I watched as he slowly trudged through the snow and picked a spot, out in the open in the sunshine, to sit down. He looked out over the yard, and then looked over his shoulder at me. He was happy to be outside. The sky above him was a beautiful deep blue with puffy white clouds. The ice shimmered like clear diamonds, enhanced from the blinding white sunlight, as it reflected off the snow.
I finished my coffee and headed for my coat and boots.
Once outside I pulled my scarf up around my face. There wasn’t a wind, but frostbite was a reality in these low temperatures. Uriah danced around my legs until I handed him his morning biscuit. I waited as he crunched it to pieces. Then he nosed around in the snow until he found every last morsel.
Being Uriah he tried for two biscuits. I shook my head at him. He didn’t seem disappointed; instead he turned and waded through the snow towards the back path.
The snow was powdery and painfully white.
Uriah stopped, and looked back at me; he was hesitant to step near the path. He must have remembered the cold water running under the ice.
I moved cautiously forward and pushed my ski pole down into the snow. It hit frozen ground. Confident I wouldn’t end up with wet feet, I moved on.
Ice crystals were growing upwards along every piece of dried grass and twig sticking up from the snow.
As I got closer, I could see unfrozen dark water. Little puffs of snow perched on top stray blades of grass, which sat above and over the water. The sight was spectacular! The area was covered with multiple bouquets of white snow flowers. The highest stood only two inches tall.
Uriah took a couple of tentative steps forward, and found his own way around the freezing water. Instead of walking straight ahead, he had turned and walked into the trees and scramble over branches.
By walking on piles of dried grass, I was able to make my way to the southern fence line. From there I picked my way around the water, hoping to avoid getting my shoes wet.
I noticed that I was not the only one who walked this way. I spotted the tracks of a coyote, rabbit, and squirrel.
I stopped and laughed! Pheasant tracks! They were heading to the east. The same direction I was going! As the ground slopped upward, I followed them up and away from the water. As the path moved slightly south, I found the tracks under the trees.
That bird had followed the fence line. He walked halfway down the path, and then his tracks turned to the south. Where he moved into the open field and headed towards the denser tree line.
I kept walking. I waded through the powdery snow. I passed up some smaller tracks. They looked like the rat tracks that were near Uriah’s kennel.
There were some prints I couldn’t identity. The snow was soft and the footprints had caved in. This animal walked with his feet apart. He left a trail, similar to train tracks.
Once I reached the end of the path I rounded the back and passed by the farmer’s air field. Headed north and took a left turn and then faced west. There the Bog Willows stayed to my right. This took me in the direction that headed back home.
I walked under a bush, and noticed smaller tracks, possibly rat tracks. Or, maybe not! This guy had circled around and around underneath the bushes. More than likely it was gathering its breakfast. A few feet on the other side of the bush I came across a coyote’s tracks. He was circling the bush from the outside. I assumed, he too, was gathering his breakfast.
Uriah appeared from the tree line and looked at me. I waved at him. He turned and went back to his games.
At that point I noticed some small, nearly dotty tracks on top of the snow. I stepped forward and stepped into a snowdrift. This animal had to be very tiny, or he would have sunk in the snow. I stood still and picked out its trail. Then I stepped back where I could follow its path without standing in deep snow.
This animal had circled every piece of grass and wildflower it passed, and it left behind a tiny dusty trail underneath each plant. Its tracks moved perpendicular along the path I was on. I thought this was great! I was heading home. I could follow it without wasting time. I would even walk a little slower and keep an eye on its tracks.
Then the little tracks disappeared under a Bog Willow…
That was when I made a mistake!
I walked forward to see where the animal tracks had gone to. When I did that, I brushed against the top of a sagging Bog Willow. It was capped with heavy snow, as was everything else in sight.
As the snow showered down on my head I heard a squeak! I saw a mouse stick his head out of its nest of milkweed seeds. That nest was built in the center of the tangled branches, on the top of that Bog Willow, which was about five feet off the ground.
I should stop here and tell you. I don’t like mice! I am the idiot that will dance on the couch, bed or table when one of the little buggers appears. On with the story…
Now, all this was happening at face level!
Uriah caught a whiff of fear and came running! He danced around my feet when he saw the mouse!
The mouse saw the dog! Then looked at me… Its mini brain worked overtime during those seconds when it tried to figure out, who it feared the least… That was the one it would leap at!
The Bog Willow branch snapped upward!
I squealed!
Uriah barked!
And the mouse squeaked and landed on my arm!
I was in a Disney movie….!
My fear was that mouse would crawl down my coat!
I stopped hopping and held my hand out to Uriah to sit. I kept thinking, “Stay calm and relaxed.”
Riight!
I reached out and put my hand on the Bog Willow. I made a very shaky bridge, which I hoped that the mouse would use.
He did!
Once he was off my arm, I was out of there!
Uriah continued to hop up and down. Run in circles and sniff at the snow under the Bog Willow.
I headed over the flooded path, and broke though the ice. A wet left foot wasn’t going to slow me down!
Uriah, finally decided to follow, but refused to come inside the house. I left him outside to guard against an invasion of mice…
*
*
*
*
This image comes from the Project Gutenberg archives. This is an image that has come from a book or document for which the American copyright has expired and this image is in the public domain in the United States and possibly other countries.
File:Hickety Dickety Dock 1 – WW Denslow – Project Gutenberg etext 18546.jpg
The thought for the day was two fold. Drain and replace the antifreeze in the tractor before the radiator cracks. The second, walk the driveway and decide whether to snow blow today, or tomorrow.
I stepped outside and the lack of sound was overpowering.
A flurry of compacted flakes blanketed the air as they slowly drifted out of a solid grey sky. Every piece of ground, branch and roof top was outlined and covered in piles of soft, feathery snow.
Uriah immediately threw himself onto the snow covered driveway and rolled and moaned. Then he jumped up and raced in a circle around me.
I grabbed the push shovel and cleared a four foot area in front of the garage door. Then I set the shovel back in the garage and looked around for Uriah. He had headed out towards the northeast tree line. He had set his nose into the snow, and started running. The snow piled over his head and back. Within a few seconds he was covered in white and looked like he was tunneling under the snow.
I glanced towards the barn, and decided the tractor could wait. I needed see how much damage happened between the ice storms, pouring rains and massive snow fall. While I walked around I could check the driveway.
I whistled for my dog and headed down the driveway to the west.
This snow was perfect for cross country skiing, soft and puffy. Lousy for building a snow man, it won’t hold together.
This morning, Kenshin, our half Siamese male, complained loudly until I brought in some snow for him. He grabbed the bowl with his front paws and pulled the snow onto the rug and floor. He ran around, sliding in it. I shook the snow onto his head. He was so excited; he turned in circles and then jumped up and tried to catch the flakes.
I had grabbed a handful of Kenshin’s snow, and rolled the snow over and over, in my hands, until it started to melt and formed a ball. My hands froze! When it was hard enough, I slid the snowball across the kitchen floor. Kenshin took off down the hallway after the ice ball. When I went to find him he was sitting on the snowball like a chicken on an egg. With a wide puffy cheeky grin, only he can make.
Now, I am walked along the east end of the driveway. The snow at this point, was only up to my ankles. I could see the deeper drifts along the bend.
I had only walked about thirty feet, when tuned towards the house. The closer I got to the house, the deeper the snow became, until it was knee high. The bushes, in front of the house, had at least a foot of snow perched on top. I used my ski pole to slide it across each one, cutting apart the snow.
I noticed Uriah nosing around the four, Blue Spruces near the southern fence. I stopped and tried to smell the cold air. The last time Uriah brought me over here he was bothering a skunk. I wasn’t falling for that again. I hesitated! Nothing, no skunk! I moved towards the trees.
The silence was heavy. Not even a bird.
I walked around the back of the trees. Uriah came with me. That’s when I saw the snow had accumulated along the southern side of the trees. I brushed off one of the lower branches, and gave one of the higher branches a little shake.
Then, I stepped back to check out the next tree. Uriah was noising under that one. He was sniffing at some rabbit tracks. Just as I came in close and reached up to shake the snow off a higher branch. Uriah dove underneath the tree. His movements vibrated through the trunk, and caused the snow, even higher up to loosen. An avalanche of snow tumbled down from those higher branches onto us both.
I was a snowwoman! Snow trickled down inside the collar of my coat, onto my bare neck.
Uriah was happy; he pranced and started rolling in the deep snow.
“I’m full of snow!” I growled.
Uriah ran at me and grabbed my pants leg and tried to trip me. When I laughed, he ran around me and tried again. I shook the snow off my hat at him.
I turned and looked up at the trees; the snow was heaver higher up. I decided if the wind picked up tonight all that soft snow will fall. If it doesn’t, I will come out tomorrow. Without Uriah and shake them off.
“Ok, Uriah! Where to now?”
Uriah barked and ran off towards the back path.
The snow became deeper the further away from the house we got. Uriah ran ahead, anticipating a walk in the far back. So, he hit the ice and water first. I watched as he stopped and slowly turned to look at me with an, “Ahhhw Shoot!” look on his furry face, just as his weight broke the ice under his paws. He only slipped into water a couple of inches deep, but it must have been cold.
“Come on Uriah, let’s walk this way.” I coaxed him out of the water and off the ice. When he walked up to me, I rubbed his face. Then I pushed him behind me and I walked forward to check the path. I could see ice under the snow stretching ahead into running water.
Uriah waited for me to whistle at him. Then he raced ahead, kicking up snow as he ran. I walked along the tree line, heading west, back to the house.
I focused my attention inside the trees. The standing water showed up as grey frozen patches, slightly hidden under the snow. Water flowed out towards the drainage pipe, which ran under the gravel driveway in front of the barn. The ice was grayish-green with pee-yellow streaks caught just under the surface. Frozen in place! The yellow looked like veins in a leaf.
I walked over the top of the drainage pipe, past the barn and in-between the mulberry bush.
The water trickled from the open pipe, on the west end of the barn. It flowed about twenty feet, until it froze solid! The top of the water had eight puffy, round snow mounds that resembled giant marshmallows. And three ovate shaped ones, which looked like they were pinched in the middle, then stretched out on the ends. The water was dark and clear; I could see the dark greens and assorted gold colors of the field grass under the water.
Uriah stood behind me, and whimpered he didn’t want his paws wet again.
“What’s wrong?” As I asked him, he turned and ran to the garage door. He had enough of the cold and wet.
I pulled at my collar and shook some snow out from under my jacket. “Ok, let’s go back in for a biscuit and coffee!”…
*
*
Picture is from word clip art
This morning when I stepped outside I was able to walk around to the dog kennel. The ice had disappeared off the driveway and the deck. It was in the mid-thirties. The air was oddly warm, and had a feel of spring, even though snow still covers the yard. The puffy clouds above me cleared and blue sky shown through.
I am going out to relatives for Christmas dinner and I wanted to post before I left. Here is a piece I wrote, December 17, 2009, I had written two other Blog entries that day, and I thought three was just too much. So I posted it today. Enjoy!
I walked out the garage door, and pulled it closed behind me. The wet snow earlier in the week had warped the door frame, now with everything frozen the door was pulling back when I opened or closed it. Why is it, that when I can’t work outside, due to the weather. Something breaks, or as in this case the door frame, the side by the near the hinges, decides to disintegrate…
The sky above me is bright blue and clear. The air is dangerously cold! I was surprised to see a dozen, or so small flighty birds hopping from tree to tree and singing.
Slipping my knit hat off my head I stopped to listen. I could hear birds chirping, singing and complaining. Looking around I found even more of them in the trees next to the barn and shed. They flittered between the dead evergreen next to the shed and the gravel in front of the barn. Then onto the leafless mulberry trees on the West side of the barn.
Small round birds, I believe they are, Dark-Eyed Juncos, soft grey feathers on their heads and back. That grey reaches along the top of their tail feathers, then changes to white slipping to their underbelly and chest. They looked like they sat in a can of white paint. Right now they were complaining loudly and flying from one tree to the next. How dare I interrupt their fun!
I heard a single call of a Blue Jay in the trees, then silence.
Off around the back yard, looking south, past the outside dog kennel. I could see a red blur jumping in-between the miniature crab apple trees. Male Cardinals, searching out dried seeds from the taller dried grasses that leaned against the trees.
Slipping on my hat, I whistled for Uriah. Slowly and nosily, we made our way across the frozen snow to the back path.
I stopped at the mid-way point, the Northern tree line. To stare up into the blue, blue sky in-between the branches of a fifty foot tree. The sky was a solid dark blue, almost an Electric Indigo. The deepest part of that color sat on the tips of that leafless tree, and then weakened into a lighter blue as I moved off center. Looking towards the south-east, the sun was a brilliant white, fading the sky into a powder blue.
Today, I was using two ski poles to maneuver through the snow. Walking carefully, I made my way towards home. The snow, where I had walked days before, had frozen over into an uneven ice rink.
Uriah’s long black nails on the frozen snow, made a sound similar to him walking on a wooden floor. His toes were spread out over the ice, and he gripped with those hard nails. He stayed by me for a moment, and then ran under the old apples trees chasing something only he could see.
I purposely cut out a new pattern in the snow, avoiding the dangerous path. I set my heels down first so I could break the top of the snow and keep my balance. Otherwise, stepping down carefully wouldn’t allow me to break through the top layer of ice, and I nearly lost my footing.
I began to notice the sound. My first step with my heel, was like an ‘AHHR- then, to complete the step, the rest of my foot rolled into the snow, with a, ‘RRRRR,’ sound.
Ahhhrrr-rrrrrr …
Add in the sound of the ski poles. Starting out with a stabbing crunching, then ending with a ‘Brrrrr,’ sound, as I tilted the pole moving into the next step.
Walking along, I was paying so much attention to the sounds I was making, that they became over powering. I stopped and removed my hat so I could hear something other than my noisy intrusion into such a quiet, sunny day,
I couldn’t hear one bird on the path, nothing! Silence! I probably scared them deeper into the tree line.
Walking back towards the house and dragging my noise with me. When I heard the sound of the train in town, I stopped to listen, “Thump- thump- thump!” Without the winds the train sounded muffled and very far away. Like a thick growl, vibrating along the ground….
*
*
Early Tuesday, afternoon I headed outside to get the mail. I stopped, about forty feet from the road. When I spotted some large, bird tracks that crossed the driveway, south to north.
I followed the tracks to the south, the way they came into my yard, and looked over the fence into my neighbor’s yard. I couldn’t see where the tracks started from. But, I could see a large number of bird and small animal prints around the trees. I noticed only the large bird had separated from the rest, and walked a four toed pattern under the wooden fence.
I retraced my steps back to the driveway and hesitated. Should I just collect the mail and head back to the house? No! This was bugging me, that bird could need help. I decided to follow the bird’s claw prints across the front yard.
Uriah came over and sniffed at the snow, then followed me.
I found a couple of feathers. They were stuck in the snow a few feet north of the driveway. Reddish mottled brown with a soft gray tuff closer to the tip, about two to three inches long, I slipped them into my coat pocket and kept following the tracks in the snow. They guided me across the front of yard. That bird had walked a zigzagging pattern, headed north, and kept to the harder packed snow.
I reached the property line on the north end. Slipped between the evergreens and stood on a sizable chunk of plowed up dirt, and stared across the field. Uriah stood next to me and waited.
I took off my right glove and readjusted my hat. The temperature was in the lower 30’s, without a wind. I wiggled toes, to check how frozen my feet were, they weren’t cold. And my fingers were still warm. I wasn’t cold at all! This gave me a reason enough to move on with my quest.
I was thinking the bird might be a hawk and he was hurt. Why else would a bird take a walk? He could have a broken wing! Or he may have been clipped by a car driving by too fast! I shook my head silently. No! If the bird had been hurt I would have seen a blood trail.
It might be a pheasant! I usually see a few of them running in the snow, or startling me when Uriah flushes them from the tall grass. Again, I shook my head; the tracks didn’t have lines formed from the birds trailing tail feathers. And this bird had four toes. I thought a Pheasant’s tracks usually showed only the front three toes.
I replaced my glove, and made sure my footing was steady. “Well, Uriah, should we head back to the house? Or…Should we see what type of bird left those tracks?”
I left it up to Uriah to decide what we did next.
I use my old ski poles as my walking sticks, I grabbed them both in a way that said I was finished standing around. Then I looked towards my dog.
Uriah sniffed the ground, glanced up at me and started to walk on ahead. Now he was following the tracks, and I followed him.
I carefully stepped out on a wash of tiny black icebergs, small points of back earth, which stood out above the snow.
Tracks of coyotes, a fox, and raccoons crossed my trail heading off to the east and west. Tire treads cut through the snow from an off road vehicle, probably the neighbor who I saw on Sunday. His tracks headed across the road into the farm field. The animal’s prints looked fresh, possible early this morning. I thought, maybe they were chasing the bird. But no, the tracks crossed each other. I doubt they actually saw one another.
Curiosity had me moving on. I was beginning to think I was following a drunken chicken
The bird had walked towards a couple of very old, gnarly Oak trees. Scratched in the snow then turned towards the road, and walked in the ditch, until he headed out on the road.
I called Uriah back, and made him sit. I waited for two cars and a truck to pass by. Once it was clear, I allowed Uriah up and out of the ditch, so he could stand next to me on the blacktop. I could see that something had been hit by a car recently. It laid still another twenty feet to the north on the opposite side of the road. The car that hit it, had been heading south.
I made sure there wasn’t any traffic in sight. Then, I told Uriah to sit and wait! I approached the carcass. It was a rooster, a big roster. With a red Comb, or was it a male ring-necked pheasant? No, it looked like a rooster…
It had the shape of a fat chicken. Well sort of. It was hit by a car!
I kept checking for cars, and took my eyes off Uriah for a second. In that time frame, he walked up to me and stared at the bird.
I glanced both ways along the road, and then asked Uriah. “Okay, what do you think it is, chicken or pheasant?”
I rolled my eyes and shook my head at him as I checked the road. Then I asked. “Okay, Uriah! What do you think it is, chicken or pheasant?”
I don’t think he cared. But wanting to get in on the game, he looked at the bird. Then he looked back at me! Then back at the bird! I could hear him loud and clear, “Can I take it? Huh? Come on let me take it!” His eyes sparkled and he started prancing around. His nails clicked loudly on the frozen blacktop.
I shook my head at him, “No! Let’s get out of the road.”
Uriah followed and only looked back once.
I saw a truck coming at us, really slow. We had enough time to walk along the road. Then move off the road, in-between the Blue Spruce and the Austrian Pine, at the north end of the front yard.
The truck turned out to be a farmer and his tractor; he was pulling a couple of swaying grain carts filled with corn. The farmer was very, very slowly making his way down the road. I waved at him. As I check the mail…