Sunday, December 8, 2013

ICE AT THE FALLS

I have a hunch that I name a post exactly like this every year.
When the temperature stays well below freezing for over a few days in a row, I have to take myself a couple of miles down the road to Snoqualmie Falls.
I do this repeatedly, yet each time I am amazed at the weather conditions right there.
The parking lot will be slippery, yes, but shrubs, etc are still green, though stiff with cold.
Thirty yards away, mist from the powerful 270-foot falls turns to ice, encasing everything .  Frost "fireflies" flit about and one suddenly feels frost-bitten; almost too cold to take photos. 







So, I made the ritual trip this last week, and took photos which included those above.

Then yesterday Dick and I drove down again, just two days later.
I couldn't believe that fir boughs no longer hung low with ice; greenery was - well, green.  Gone was the ice effect.
However, the Falls had been reduced to about 1/3rd of its width because it had frozen!
It has actually been severely cold long enough for that phenomenon to occur!

I was in a quandary as to how the ice no longer encased everything until a daughter pointed out that the power of the Falls had been reduced and probably no longer sent up enough mist to freeze on things.




...just on itself.




Above the Falls, from the same perspective as the photo above:




BRUMAL BLING

The first frost this fall did not actually freeze on the ground.  But the cold air did catch in spider's webs, turning them to crystal displays.  I discovered this phenomenon while on my early-morning walk, so returned home for my camera, turning my exercise into a delightful stroll of discovery.








AROUND GOLD CREEK POND

We were looking for color on the mountainsides, but we are also very good at "taking in" all our surroundings.  What a surprise that we spent the rest of the 1-mile walk around the lake looking down!

And no wonder!  
We would have given anything to have a guidebook to identify the varieties of
mushrooms we found.
These pure white ones were about the size of a tiny thimbles:
  

Love the tutus!

This velvety variety was smaller than a cluster of grapes:

A closer look:

With forest floor surroundings:

A minuscule white variety illuminated very dark places: 






SEARCHING FOR WINTER


A cancer journey has greatly interrupted my photography experiences.
Daily breast cancer treatments curtailed my outings, and frankly, my interest too.
The magic came together one Saturday in October with cold, plus sun, the treatment-free day, and the availability of photo buddy, Pat.
Up to the Pass we went, hoping for fall colors to still be brightening the mountainsides.


 Better almost than "colors" was the frost, tightening,
lightening the underbrush.


I love how heavy frost embosses the leaf veins, and webs.



Not much color left - we were too late for that - but a single shot of gold on the banks of Lake Keechelus caught our attention.  

Our destination: Gold Creek pond:

Frozen fog hovered low:


 Very tired, dried-up fireweed was a catch-all for frozen webs: 


Saturday, September 14, 2013

RETURN TO MICHIGAN ! #1

Paradise Revisited!
I couldn't believe the dream came true this August.  My first visit a year ago proved to me that even though I am a devoted native Pacific Northwesterner, there really does exist another beautiful "West Coast": the part of north-western Michigan that borders the east shore of Lake Michigan.  
Photo Buddy Pat and I achieved our dream of returning!
What I loved seeing all over again were the many "waters' edges".
So, here are a few.


Bass Lake Outlet; the ideal swimming place.

The old jetty, on the border of Ludington State Park:



Beaches, beaches everywhere! White sand. 
This was my 2nd visit, and I still have to remind myself that this is fresh water:

Are we greedy?  We saw just hints of autumn, and all we could say was,
"How gorgeous this must be in the Fall.  We really need to return to see all this ablaze."


MICHIGAN #2 LIGHTHOUSES

West Shore Lighthouses are becoming old friends.  I was so happy to return  to feel the power of their purpose, presence, and endurance.

Ludington Light under storm clouds:


Little Sable casts a long shadow on the sand.
I was happy to get myself into position to make this photo.

Little Sable, a brick obelisk:


We reached Big Sable Lighthouse
via a long hike through woods, and returned on the sand at water's edge.


Lighthouse staircase looks almost abstract, 
or like an immense metal chambered nautilus :

Boardwalk connects lighthouse to the beach:


MICHIGAN MISCELLANY # 3

I don't know what the state bird of Michigan is, but I would like to think it is the wild swan.
They calmly showed ownership of every waterway we saw.
Here, a trio of adolescent cygnets:


Any wonder why this large farm building (not a house) caught our attention?
It looked like a 3-dimensional etching.

Spider Street of Dreams award of the year:

In the shadows on the trail:

Sand-topping boardwalks charmed me!

Surprised expressions on the chimney-pots of a lighthouse: