Sumac Over the Pond
March 20, 2016
TURKEYS OUT MY WINDOW
Yesterday was a post chemotherapy drag day for sure for me.... no taste, fatigue, strange yucky feelings and frustrations... but this morning when I woke up I thought of Grandpa Adam and him telling kids at early hours of the morning, very early hours of the morning, mind you, that they should, "Wake up and here the birds!"
Although it wasn't that early, when I woke up at 7, I did force myself to get right up... just incase. And it wasn't long until I saw a huge group of turkeys out the kitchen window. They kept coming, about thirty or more of them, toms and hens both. Occasionally a tom would begin to strutt and fan out his tail feathers for all to see. Toms and younger males called jakes, have beards that hang down from their necks. I saw many turkeys in the group with beards.
I could hear the Canadian geese honking around out on our pond from inside the cabin as well as a few turkey gobbles. There are about nine geese out here lately of various sizes. (Note the geese in the photo above.)
The geese are often splashing around and darting at each other, trying to stake out their territory I'm guessing. My hubby said he noticed a pair starting to build a nest the other day. Our pond will soon be ice free and sporting some goslings.
Yesterday we even heard a couple frogs singing.
I figured nobody would mind, and it might be good therapy today to write a blog post while I'm appreciating nature, through my kitchen window.
I hope you can find something cool to appreciate today in nature as well... Nature is a great healing tool.
March 8, 2016
COMING OUT OF A TUNNEL
A little pink sunset at home this evening |
Spring is in the air everywhere, literally, as I pause to sweep a spider off my shoulder while writing in my journal this afternoon. I'd been putting off creating a new post for the last few weeks, mainly because I haven't felt worth a hoot since starting chemotherapy again in mid February. With temperatures in the 60's and so much to observe in nature, it feels like time to get back at it. Today, sitting outside by the pond feels great!
I'm watching the geese swim back and forth and wondering if two of them are our resident geese from years passed. It's unusual in our little pond for more than two geese to share the space without a lot of squawking going on. Maybe it's too early for nesting so they are just putting up with one another.
Last evening and this morning, the red winged blackbirds once again were singing loudly in the tree tops around the pond. Yesterday we saw five robins and heard killdeer at Sherwood Lake and today we watched a sandhill crane in a nearby field. What a treat it was to hear its prehistoric call, something that has been missing in my world for several months.
A red winged blackbird in the treetop, spreads it's wings each time it sings. |
The return of the geese, cranes, robins and red winged blackbirds is about two weeks early this year and that makes me smile. They couldn't have had better timing! As I watch the geese dunk their heads under the water and splash around, I think they must be smiling too. I wonder if the ice is cold on their feet as they keep taking turns standing on one foot and then the other.
The air today even has a balmy feeling attached to it. This morning we were awakened by a crash of thunder and lightening that produced a huge white flash in the kitchen. I remember an old saying... six months after the first thunderstorm of the year will be the first frost... I'm not sure on that one, but it's possible.
Springtime can be muddy in Wisconsin, but it's also magical. For me this year especially, spring is therapeutic, and I feel like I'm coming out of a long dark tunnel once again!
The spider on my shoulder |
Enjoy Spring while it lasts...
it won't be long and it'll be too hot!
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