FALL: Preparing for Winter, Part II

FALL: Preparing for Winter, Part II
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​This is our busiest time of year as we gear up for the winter storms and snowfall to come, tightening up or putting in new shorelines, putting new surge anchors on them, cutting out worn pieces of rope, and checking to make sure all the knots are secure. We also work on adding flotation to our houses, new logs added to the outside or slid into bug-eaten openings.

But preparation for winter isn’t all about hard labor. We also have to prepare our minds for the coming short days and diminishing sunshine. Even my Maine Coon Katya feels this urge. I catch glimpses of her quietly meditating on the last days of overhead sunshine and I wonder what she’s thinking about the changing season.

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​At this time of the year I make a point of going for long rambles over the rocks, soaking in the piercing, poignant fall sunlight often framed by approaching storm clouds. I let the world fall away, forget the coming winter, and absorb the trenchant reality of the vast wilderness with my aloneness as a human being standing on the edge of the world.

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​We’re surrounded by evergreen conifers so there are few trees that change colors, just the alders and crab apple trees, mainly, and those that do leap out from the endless variatians of perennial green. There’s one evergreen, though, that works as a bridge between them–the western red cedar as it displays patches of brilliant orange, known as flagging.

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​Flagging is the red cedar’s way of prioritizing its resources. It lets the inner foliage, that receives the least sun and doesn’t get washed as often so it’s the least productive, die off. It’s alien but beautiful, and doesn’t last for long. In the first big storm all those orange needles are blown off and mark the tideline for weeks to come, a reminder that the warm days of summer are gone.

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​On one of my long rambles I came across a red cedar log that the tide had perched, just for me, like a park bench between rocks overlooking the strait. I seated myself and soaked in the spash of the waves with the sun sparkling down on them as the bull kelp, rooted to rocks below, bobbed carelessly as if unaware of the storms that would eventually tear them loose and toss them on the shore. Geese flew over, black silhouettes against a perfect blue sky, waving goodbye to me as they headed south like the summer people and tourists that were absent from the strait after roaring up and down it all summer long. It was just me and the whales now.

It’s at times like these that I know I’m the richest human on earth and can only thank God for these treasures that I’m storing up for the coming winter.

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Love it, love it, love it!

I could use some time like that. I’m glad you realize how special it is.

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Tara (ADOW)

11/10/2017 05:33:47 pm

I never want to lose track of how privileged I am to live out here like this with such amazing beauty around me all the time. People sometimes ask me why I live out here when it takes so much work, so I wanted to write a post that shows the riches that make it all worthwhile, and then some. I hope you get time to soak in the wonders of your part of the world, too. Thanks for writing, Wendy!

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