Making familiar stops on the way to winter

The recent arrival of winter weather is my cue to start thinking about feeding the birds again — hoping the neighborhood bears have likewise concluded it is time to head back into the hills. 

I’m shifting the bird feeders to the other side of the house this year and am curious to see whether I can attract more winter finches where there is conifer cover nearby. 

I’m hoping for siskins, redpolls and grosbeaks, but that all depends on how scarce they find their preferred foods in the boral forests of the north.

Some bare root shrubs and saplings arrived in the mail as well, so I’ll be getting them tucked into the still-unfrozen ground in the coming days. It seems strange to be planting in the dormant season, when the success of my efforts won’t be revealed until the days of warmth return. 

Still, horticulture, like gardening in general, is an act of optimism and delayed gratification all in one. It takes a lifetime or more to grow a mature forest from seeds. It is an investment in more than one’s own future.

I’m thinking about my ice skates out on the porch and when I’ll be able to have them sharpened. 

I’m counting the balled up woolen socks in my drawer and wondering if I should get another pair or two to see me through. 

I know I need new boots, but I’m in decent shape for the rest of my for winter wear. 

My extremities get colder than they used to, now, and Alpaca wool mittens and stockings have become essential to my comfort and well-being. 

I’ve started my winter whiskers as well, a stiff brush of mixed gray and black that I’ll keep for a few months when the wind bites and the ice gathers. I’m a bit startled each time I decide to let my beard grow, having become accustomed to being clean-shaven. Each year I accumulate a bit more gray, a well-earned patina. I’ll shed the beard when the sap runs. Until then, it is just another sign of the season, a marker on the way to winter.

 

Tim Abbott is program director of Housatonic Valley Association’s Litchfield Hills Greenprint. His blog is at www.greensleeves.typepad.com. 

 

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