It’s Winter, all right, and it looks like she’s settled in, which is just fine by me.
It takes a good dose of New England hardiness to survive a
winter like this. At least to survive it with some sense of good cheer. There
is shoveling and roof clearing and endless plowing and firewood carrying. If
you’re lucky (and smart) there is also skiing and snowshoeing and ice skating
and sledding and snow fort building. My kids (and I, too) lamented the December
rain and the loss of white from our landscape. Cold and brown is no good for a
winter-loving soul. Cold and snow is an entirely different, and much happier,
thing.
It seems while we head into the white looking for fun, many
animals – the hardiest of New Englanders – have hunkered down since the deep snowfall.
A few weeks ago our fields were laced with deer tracks and the hopping marks of
red squirrels and the canine paw prints of coyotes, along with fox and the
elusive bobcat. Lately, however, when I strap on the cross-country skis for a
mind-clearing trek through the field and woods, I see far fewer tracks. A
solitary deer trail emerging from the trees here, a snowshoe hare track
bounding across the path there. The garden compost heap, which had been visited
regularly by a bold doe, has been left alone for days, except by the crows.
On the coldest days, even the ever-cheery chickadees wait
until well after I’ve had my own breakfast to visit the feeder. A pair of blue
jays often sit puffed against the chill on bare branches nearby, their
brightness almost startling against a backdrop of white. The other day a barred
owl perched atop a dead birch tree in the field, head turning methodically in
search of a meal, feathers ruffled by the wind. Eventually the owl gave up and
flew away; there were no small rodents moving through the deep snow below.
The only animal who seems unbothered by the cold and deepening
snow is the porcupine, whose trough-like trail through the woods crosses the
human-made path of snowshoes and skis just where it has the past few winters. Scraping
teeth marks appear like brush strokes across several smallish yellow birch trees
along the trail, revealing where the porcupines ate the inner bark, a favorite
winter meal.
I know there are plenty of people who hunker down, too,
closed up in their warm houses waiting for spring through the long northern
winter. And there are others whose children have had far too many snow days
(while here we’ve had zero snow days and still plenty of snow), wreaking havoc
on the already complicated logistics of family schedules. In Boston and other
cities, they are running out of places to put all the snow; commuting is an
ongoing nightmare, and this winter is a multifaceted headache there.
Here, it is just winter, to be endured or enjoyed, depending
on your perspective. Sure, plowing and shoveling become tiresome when they are daily
chores, but all that pushed-up snow makes a great foundation for a snow fort. Frigid
temperatures can certainly wear a person down after a while, but that cold
makes the cocoa all the better. Driving through snow is not much fun, but
skiing in it is pure, invigorating bliss.
In mid-February, the days are noticeably longer than a few
weeks ago. To some, that means spring is coming. To the rest of us, it means
more daylight for basking in Winter’s white glow.
Original content by Meghan McCarthy McPhaul, posted to her Blog: Writings From a Full Life. This essay also appears as Meghan's Close to Home column in the February 13, 2015 edition of the Littleton Record.
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