Friday, February 17, 2012
Winter Bird
Downy Woodpecker
Picoides pubescens
In fall and early winter, male and female downies maintain separate territories. Each bird excavates its own roost. In late winter, each member of a pair selects its own drumming post and the drumming duets begin. Over the next several months, the mates will increasingly synchronize their activities. After beginning several excavations, the pair will finally agree on a nest site in dead wood twelve to thirty feet above ground. Both sexes excavate the cavity, which is usually camouflaged by surrounding lichen or moss. The four to five eggs hatch in about twelve days. Both adults incubate and later brood and feed the nestlings. The male may do most of the brooding. The young leave the nest at about three weeks of age and remain near their parents for around three more weeks. In winter, adults and juveniles often forage with other small birds.
Fifty Common Birds of the Upper Midwest, watercolors by Dana Gardner, text by Nancy Overcott
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Bachelor Bess Winter Story
February 14, 1914 / Fort Pierre, South Dakota
To Mrs. M. M. Corey
Plague take that ground hog! We had such swell weather—was as warm as spring. The last day of January they were worrying over not having any ice. The river seemed going out and they say if the ice goes out before the 10th of February it doesn't freeze again. But that ground hog settled that. He put his nose out just at the wrong time. Then it kept getting colder and colder till the night of the 4th when we had a howling blizzard[;] it lasted all day the next day and the following day (Friday) I made it to school tho few did. The cold was intense. Grant froze his nose and toes just going to the barn. I made my twelve miles that Friday and only frosted my feet. Saturday was a fright again but it moderated a little and I made it to school O.K. We had another howling storm all day Wednesday so I stayed at Donahues that night. Stayed again Friday night in hopes that I could get to town yesterday with Mr. D but it stormed to beat the [railroad] cars yesterday and is at it today. They are out of groceries and coal so Mr. D is going to try to make it in this afternoon and out tomorrow but its fierce. Thought I'd let you know I was O.K. and won't try to drive till its better.
Well I must close. Don't worry about me.
Lovingly yours,
Bachelor Bess
To Mrs. M. M. Corey
Plague take that ground hog! We had such swell weather—was as warm as spring. The last day of January they were worrying over not having any ice. The river seemed going out and they say if the ice goes out before the 10th of February it doesn't freeze again. But that ground hog settled that. He put his nose out just at the wrong time. Then it kept getting colder and colder till the night of the 4th when we had a howling blizzard[;] it lasted all day the next day and the following day (Friday) I made it to school tho few did. The cold was intense. Grant froze his nose and toes just going to the barn. I made my twelve miles that Friday and only frosted my feet. Saturday was a fright again but it moderated a little and I made it to school O.K. We had another howling storm all day Wednesday so I stayed at Donahues that night. Stayed again Friday night in hopes that I could get to town yesterday with Mr. D but it stormed to beat the [railroad] cars yesterday and is at it today. They are out of groceries and coal so Mr. D is going to try to make it in this afternoon and out tomorrow but its fierce. Thought I'd let you know I was O.K. and won't try to drive till its better.
Well I must close. Don't worry about me.
Lovingly yours,
Bachelor Bess
Bachelor Bess: The Homesteading Letters of Elizabeth Corey, 1909-1919 edited by Philip L. Gerber
Monday, February 13, 2012
Winter Gardening
Tuesday, February 14
Thirteen above this morning—a balmy start by comparison with the last several days. A good omen for St. Valentine's. But when I put Pip out on his leash, the air must've hit me the wrong way because it suddenly felt intolerable. So cold, so harsh, I didn't even want to look at the sky or eyeball the backyard or anything else outside. I just wanted to get back in as fast as I could. And when I got back inside, something inside me screamed out what I was feeling just then in every part of my being. "I've had it. Had it with the cold, the wind, the ice, the ice-covered driveway, the ice park over the backyard, the iced-over sidewalks, the iced-up car, my ice-nipped ears and toes and fingertips. And the heavy clothing. And the dry air. And the overheated rooms. Everything." Or words to that effect.
But Kate was still asleep. I didn't want to wake her up. And besides, the feeling passed so quickly I was left musing upon the suddenness of its appearance, as if out of nowhere. Like the dream I'd had just a few hours earlier about the end of the semester. It was the last week of classes, or perhaps exam week, or the week after graduation. No one around. And I was wandering the hallways, looking for someone to talk to, to have coffee with. But all the offices were shut. And no signs of light or life were visible in the gaps between the office doors and the floor. I was standing alone in an empty hallway, in an empty building. Not an uncommon experience when school is out. And sometimes, in fact, a pleasurable image to contemplate, especially in the midst of a semester when the press of students and committees becomes unbearable. But in my dream last night, I felt desolate beyond belief, with a great heaving in my chest. An anguish so intense I was on the verge of tears. And then I awoke, shaking. And then it gradually came to me that I must have been grieving the prospect of my retirement. A strange twist, given the pleasure I've had this semester, on "phased-in retirement," teaching only one course with just a dozen students and a few auditors, who leave me almost completely free to write my daily reports and to contemplate the time when I'll be completely free to write, travel, and garden as I wish. I thought I'd adjusted to the chilly side of retirement just as I thought I'd adjusted to the harshness of winter, except, of course, for a few qualms now and then, like the ones I had a couple of weeks ago. But when all is said and done, it must be that I'm troubled by a long run of bitterly cold weather, no matter where it occurs—wide awake or in a dream, in an empty hallway or right outside the back door. This winter watch is getting closer to home than I imagined.
From Carl H. Klaus's Weathering Winter: A Gardener's Daybook
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