A January Wrapup: Winter’s Slow Approach

I’m going to try to post here more often. I think most of us are feeling the need for a little more nature and beauty these days, so I’m doing my part to send some of that out into the world.

I’m finding myself really paying attention to what’s right outside my door, and taking most of my pictures within walking distance of our house. It challenges me to be creative, and helps me to feel more connected to the natural world. I’m trying to capture the sense of awe and wonder that I feel–I wonder if I will ever tire of it.

That being said, January is not my favourite time of the year. One of my favourite poets, Brian Bilston (find him on social media or at brianbilston.com), perfectly sums up my feelings about the month:

Thirty Days has September,
April, June and November,
Unless a leap year is its fate,
February has twenty-eight.
All the rest have three days more,
excepting January,
which has six thousand,
one hundred and eighty-four.

January seemed long and gray this year, as if everything was waiting for real winter to start. We’d get a dusting of snow, and then a warm or rainy day so that everything melted. And I have to admit, I found myself curling up indoors and feeling down. So here’s my note to myself and my message to you: get outside! It always helps.

A walk in the woods is good for the soul, and the bright green of my favourite mossy roots never disappoints.

Roots covered in bright green moss spread out at the base of a leaning birch tree, in a forest. The trees are bare and the ground is covered in brown leaves.

The vernal pools had finally filled. The ice and fallen leaves create beautiful patterns. In the spring, these seasonal ponds will be safe, fish-free breeding grounds for frogs and other aquatic critters; by late summer they will have dried up again.

Swirly patterns on ice, with brown frozen leaves visible underneath the ice.
Oak leaves caught in ice, that has patterns as if it was folded.

Although many of the birds have gone south for the winter, there are a surprising (to me) number that stick around, like this little Downy Woodpecker.

A small woodpecker looks at hte camera from its perch on the side of a tree trunk. There are big patches of bark missing from the tree.

Northern Harriers, like hawks, eagles, and kestrels, find prey in the fields all year-round.

a large mostly brown raptor with yellow legs and yellow eyes has its wings outstretched as it takes off from a fence post.

On a gray day when the precipitation alternated between rain and wet snow, this Red-Tailed Hawk was looking a little bedraggled.

A large mostly brown raptor is perched on a fencepost in falling snow, its body turned away and its head turned to the left as it eyes the camera.

A Rough-Legged Hawk that same afternoon, as the temperature dropped and the wetness became real snow.

A white and brown raptor flies over a  field of dead wildflower stalks, in falling snow.

The Short-Eared Owls come out at dusk–just when there’s hardly enough light to photograph them.

A small brown owl with a mostly white face and a white half-circle around each side of its face is perched on one of four fence posts at the edge of a field.

A number of Snowy Owls spend the winters here, down from their breeding grounds on the Tundra. They’re beautiful and exotic, but it’s important not to disturb them. Stress, and flying away from humans, uses valuable energy that they need for hunting and staying warm, and endangers their survival. We regularly see birders and photographers trying to get too close, trespassing on private property, and generally behaving disrespectfully to the owls and the people who live here. So while I am as excited as anyone to see and photograph a Snowy Owl, I rarely go looking for them. But this one was calmly perched at the top of a telephone pole as we drove by, so I stopped just long enough for a few clicks.

A large white owl with brown speckles looks down at the camera from atop a pole. The sky is white.

The white-tailed deer are frequent visitors to our field and woods, with a group of six or seven females and juveniles coming by most mornings and evenings. There’s often a buck, or a few of them, hanging nearby.

A large brown deer with big antlers, a white throat, and ears outstretched turns to look at the camera. It's standing at the edge of woods with several very large trees nearby, in golden late afternoon light.
A large male deer with antlers is trotting along a field of dead grass, at the edge of the woods.

Another Red-Tailed Hawk, in the snow.

A hawk with reddish brown head and tail, and dark speckled back, body facing away from the camera but head turned partway back, sits on a branch  in a snowstorm.

It’s not ONLY about the wild side. Farm country is beautiful too.

Closeup of three rows of round hay bales with adusting of snow. A small farm shed is visible just behind them.

Cold weather tends to bring blue skies. Toward the end of the month, a few cold, sunny days made everything seem more cheerful.

A large red barn and weathered red shed, surrounded by snowy field and a farm fence. The sky is blue with puffy white clouds.

On a walk with the dog, the gnarled branches of this shagbark hickory tree, and their spreading shadows, caught my eye.

A tree with gnarled branches stands in a snowy field with patches of dead hay bending over. The sky and shadows on the snow are blue, and the sun is shining through the tree.

And finally, one beautiful day near the end of the month, we walked along the shore of Lake Ontario. You can see snow squalls on their way. I was happy to see them coming: I know not everyone feels the same way, but to me it’s not winter until there’s snow!

A dramatic scene with mounds of ice and snow in the foreground and icy lake Ontario stretching to the horizon. Big puffy white clouds reach up to a very blue sky. There are darker bands of precipitation where the sky meets the water.

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8 Responses

  1. suzanne says:

    Precious pictures Linda!
    Thanks for sharing!

  2. Lesley says:

    Winter is more beautiful with your camera views. You’re lucky to have so much wildlife all around you

  3. Karen Cervantes says:

    Thank you, Linda, love the owls you captured.

  4. Shari Rodenberger says:

    I love seeing your backyard! Especially the animals!

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