JOURNAL
A Winter Walk in the Woods
The historic-size blizzard that swept north from the South, inundating Washington, D. C., Philadelphia, New Jersey and New York City with accumulations of two feet or more, left only 6 or 7 inches of powdery snow here in the Farmington Valley, the northern edge of the storm.
A Very Rare Bird in Farmington & Avon
In what is thought to be only the 4th or 5th known appearance of the species ever in Connecticut, a pink-footed goose has been seen repeatedly in Farmington and Avon in recent days.
A Fall Foliage Ramble in Connecticut’s Northeast Corner
So magnificent is the autumn foliage spectacle in New England that writers have struggled for centuries to capture its essence in words.
The September 27, 2015, Total Eclipse of the Moon
Well, you have a once in a generation celestial event, especially one that comes at a comfortable time – late evening – and you better not miss it. Last night’s total eclipse of a “supermoon” may not, from my perspective anyway, have been as spectacular as some of the media predictions, but it nonetheless was pretty cool.
The Lifeblood of the Landscape
I like to say that rivers are the lifeblood of the landscape.
Here in Connecticut, as in so much of the developed world, we haven’t always treated them well, lifeblood or not.
The Wildflowers of May
Wild ginger is an interesting wildflower that blooms in May in Connecticut woodlands. The flower is almost secretive, blossoming at ground level and hidden by two heart-shaped leaves.
Hard to Top Lion’s Head Scenery
The hike to Lions Head on the section of the Appalachian Trail that passes through Salisbury is high on my list of the best half-day hikes in Connecticut. If you like to hike and haven’t done this one, well, it is a must-do.
Martha on the Mountain
It was 51 degrees and windy when I arrived atop Mohawk Mountain about 9:45 yesterday morning. Sitting on a rock was an older woman, wearing warm clothes and gloves.
A Farmer’s Manifesto
Visiting the Hartland Historical Society in Vermont, historian Bill Hosley of Enfield, Ct., came upon a paper written in 1907 by a prominent local farmer, Byron P. Ruggles.
It was a hand-typed, 10-page manuscript with the less-than-compelling title “Modern vs. Conservative Dairying.” Hosley began reading
The Raw Material of Dreams
If it were possible to calculate an index of happiness, two numbers ought to be part of the formula – rivers explored, trails hiked.
I do not know exactly how many trail guides and river guides I own. Glance over my shoulder and I see seven shelves of them in my study.
A canoe returns some of the buoyancy of life.
— Edwin Way Teale, late 20th-Century Connecticut naturalist and author, from “Circle of the Seasons”