By now you know that I like winter. I like ice. I like being out in all weather except HOT & Humid. Winter often looks quite dull but with my curious mind I am always looking for something interesting.
Mulewings
"Success is the Best Revenge"
Friday, January 17, 2025
The World of Ice
By now you know that I like winter. I like ice. I like being out in all weather except HOT & Humid. Winter often looks quite dull but with my curious mind I am always looking for something interesting.
Thursday, January 16, 2025
That's the way it was...
Can you see why I like winter???
We spent summers in this tiny cottage which had two rooms and a bathroom. We had cold running water but no tub or shower. If I recall, the tiny house was built for my Grandmother's parents to live out their elder years.
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Domestic Goddess
Brrrrr. Brrrr.
Brrr.
It was cold cold and beyond frigid.
Let's just say we hit another cold spell. Out came the heavy coveralls, balaclava and goggles ---> I nearly typed 'googles'.
That is how I dress for morning chores. It makes things easy when you step into coveralls and just zip up. I also have snow bibs for ultra cold days like this. My normal clothing for below zero zero often includes my fox hat.
This shot is from the Polar Vortex in 2022. The chill factor was -39 F. But I still had to go out and take care of our animals. I had on coveralls AND a vest and an insulated flannel to combat the wind chill.
It wasn't that bad today though. With the NW breezes at 14 mph, I was able to feed the critters in a sunny breezeless pocket in the woods.
The fur hat with fur earflaps are the style for cold weather. The goggles keep my eyes from tearing up and feeling dry. I have over the glasses snowmobile goggles on. They work!
I have a wonderful warm pair of homemade mittens that my Grandmother made years ago. A cousin of mine sent me all of the mittens she found when she cleaned out my Aunt's house. No one else wanted the mittens. I scooped them up. I have a supply of warm homemade mittens to last the rest of my life.
To answer the questions in the back of your minds...NO. I did not go out to hike and challenge the subzero windchills. In fact, I did chores and then laundry, then sorted medications for hubby cleaned house, .....and did all those fun and mundane indoor tasks that one has to do.
I finished up 'cuddle blankets' for the neighbor boys. Little soft colorful finger loop 'knitted' blankets for Olive's littles. The theory is that they can carry these with them and not drag them on the floor? I don't know...it is worth a try.
It looks messy. I haven't finished the second one. I plan on putting 3 rows of wild colors at the top of this second one so the boys can figure out which tiny blanket belongs to who.
Olive said her boys like to put their faces into very soft material. Maybe they will like it? Maybe they won't. It was just a fun idea I thought I'd try. Plus, I get to practice my 'finger looping'.
I even made a huge pot of homemade soup.
I was a Domestic Goddess for a day.
Monday, January 13, 2025
Another spot I've followed ....
The valley is very remote. It is steep and narrow. More on that in another post.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
Ice Bubbles?... At The Spot
Amazing ice bubbles?
I've seen these before but never tried to photograph them to show their depth and bizarre-ness.
This is at our creek along 'the wall' where the tiny trout hang out. I've always seen itty bitty bubbles come up from the bottom of this spot.
Apparently they froze and spread out as they got to the surface of the water [it is deep and very still in this spot]. Then the next bubbles froze in layers?
The ice was very thin and clear. If our weather stays below freezing in the valley, this spot would eventually freeze over and I wouldn't get to see the bubble ice!
We didn't find any Blue Birds or Robins this time around, however the Nuthatches, Juncos, and Chickadees were all busy in the area.
This is the same spot with Charlie and I a few years ago.
The same spot in the spring of 2018 during a snow melt...
...and since I've been photographing this 'spot' as it changes for 20 years, here is a photo of me on my mule Badger who was 15 hands at this spot in 2005 when this 'spot' was dry and the creek ran trickled just in back of my mule.
Since then different flash floods have slightly changed the depth of the creek and the route. Trees have fallen across areas and water has swirled out deep pools where the ice bubbles formed.
The area has deepened which would be obvious in comparing the photo with me on Badger to the one with me holding Charlie.
It is my Spot.
I hike there nearly daily.
Thursday, January 09, 2025
Cypto-hondriac
That is not a real word but I thought it fun enough to use as a title. Hubby has some severe aphasia from his stroke so sometimes words come out backwards and sometimes they come out the opposite from what he intended.
He will say 'she' when referring to 'he', often when referring to someone or to a pet. This has been ongoing since 2018 so I am pretty used to it. Since we've been a pretty close couple for many years, I pretty much know exactly what he wants to say or what he is trying to communicate.
However, I often let him work it out for himself which is what he prefers. Once in a while he will give me a glance [during a doctor's visit for example]. That glance is HELP! I can complete his words for him then.
We were talking with the nurse on his 6 month follow up when he came to this word. The nurse was reviewing his long list of medications when he piped up that this list made him look like a 'Cypto-hondriac'.
He meant Hypochondriac. Funny enough, the nurse never blinked as he struggled through the word and she smiled and said, "We know you are not a Hypochondriac!"
When the doctor came in she did her thing and then asked if there was anything else she could do for him today.
Hubby asked for a shop...he kept struggling for a second and then got it out: A body shop for me? A new body?
She smiled of course.
Hubby hinted that he thought he'd gained weight. She looked at her file and said that he had remained stable for the past year or so.
Then I saw something that I rarely see doctors do. She reached over and patted his leg and told him.
"Rich, you will be 76 this soon and you've earned the right to eat exactly what you want to and what you like."
I thought that was very kind of her to say.
I will note that my husband is in Palliative Care. Palliative Care aims to treat a patient with a serious illness for the Quality of Life until their death ... with attention to the care partner also. This will usually also involve a social worker to assist with questions and issues.
It is not hospice which is quite different.
I feel that it is a kinder and more gentle type of care for elderly patients with a serious illness.
Tuesday, January 07, 2025
Cold and Ice. I like ice.
I waited for a 'warmer' day to go hiking and check out the Ice Falls and the Rock Shelter on Wintergreen Trail. I thought I dressed properly.
Thought being the word of the day.
The worst part was my mitten - gloves. I chose the very wrong ones. I thought the polar fleece ones would be plenty warm. They are thin and work in most of the weather but apparently not in temperatures in the low teens with a slight breeze. I should have worn my little cheap thin gloves and my hand made mittens with the double palm.
Lesson learned. I balled up my hands inside the mitten gloves and stuck them inside my jacket pockets in an effort to warm them up.
Charlie and I went on regardless of the cold fingers. I was smart enough to add a scarf to the contents of my backpack so I could use that to protect my face from the breeze off the river. I generally pack a spare pair of gloves or mittens too. Ach. Lesson learned.
We made it without any trouble to the place where there is a Rock Shelter that turns into an Ice Cave by February. I wanted to see how the warm weather, fog, and rain, affected the building of the ice. Was it all gone? Was it there?
It was there and it surprised me. The Rock Shelter itself is huge. The ice was long and but I couldn't get a good shot of it.
Here is a shot from 2019 that a friend took of me hugging the ice.
The cooler parts are not the rock shelter itself, but the area that it drains down into.
There are actually 2 areas of Ice Falls in this one spot. Water drains constantly from across the ridge and flows over this area and out to the river.
Here is a wide view from the bottom.
This view is stunning. I don't think many people get to see this because the climb down is pretty intense. The Shelter I was pictured in .. is in the top right of this photo. So it is quite a distance that the water flows.
To the left is an ice falls. To me, it is one of the prettiest ice formations I've ever seen.
I always climb down to view it in the winter. I just can't help myself.
Along the trail there are a few other interesting places to see ice. This one is a bit treacherous if you are not paying attention and try to walk over it when snow covers it.
We made it to the end of the long bluff and got a shot of the river below us. In many places it was frozen over. However the river is dangerous when iced over because the water is flowing underneath it.