Showing posts with label Big Creek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Creek. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Keep Your Eyes Open! It's Springtime!

No matter how busy I am, I try to make time to see and experience springtime. Spring lurches in to Northeast Ohio. Early on you move back and forth from winter to summer. But the days inexorably grow longer, the spring peepers start to sing their mating song, the trees begin turning red as buds swell, and wildflowers begin to bloom.

As Walt Whitman might proclaim: I'm the witness. I was there. I am there!

Here is a recent poem about the lurching nature of early spring:

Wake to Warmth, Light, and Song

Three days ago, snow covered the ground,
But today I hike in 70-degree sunshine—

What is it? Late late winter?
Early early spring?

The woods seem dormant still,
But fringing the wetlands I see pussy willow bloom,
And in the mud flats flags rise up six inches, cattails really,
And skunk cabbage in its strange purple swirl—
This swamp is a furnace of heat and life,
Even in the winter.

I notice swollen red maple buds in the wet woods
And hear more bird song than I’ve heard in months—
Cardinals, redwing blackbirds, mourning doves,
And all the invisible, to me, birds
Who, on treetops, sing like coloratura sopranos.

And then, near the marsh, I hear
For the first time in ten months
The joyful chorus of spring peepers.

We have survived the silence, the darkness,
The barrenness: we wake to warmth,

To light,
To song!


                        [Bob Coughlin / March 10, 2016]


One of the early signs of spring is the blooming of the serviceberry tree (which is called "sarvis" in Kentucky and the Appalachians). I have recently written a poem about this blooming:

Sarvis Time

The Serviceberry bloom on the hillsides
And the forest edges, the Herald of Spring &
Resurrection of a woods that still looks lifeless.

The signs of renewed life are present , but subtle:
Bloodroot unfolding, coltsfoot, looking like little suns,
Ramps greening up the forest floor.

In Kentucky this tree is called “Sarvis,”
Flowering when the itinerant preachers arrived in early spring,
Holding “sarvices” for the winter’s dead.

Bu this tree doesn’t feel like a funeral, but a birth,
Rebirth, christening, anointing the forehead

With a Sign of Hope.

Sarvis in bloom

Linda and I walk in all the parks around Northeast Ohio. Many of them are excellent places for wildflowers (I think of Big Creek and Headwaters Park in Geauga; Penitentiary Glenn and Girdled Road Reservation in Lake County; North Chagrin and South Chagrin in Cuyahoga County). And so many more! Northeast Ohio might not be as good as Eastern Kentucky and the Smoky Mountains for wildflowers--but it is pretty darn good!

Here are some recent photos of local wildflowers:

Trillium--one of my favorite wildflowers

A field of trillium (Headwaters Park, Geauga County)

Squirrel Corn (with some blue violets)

Yellow violets

Skunk cabbage

Marsh marigold (Booth Road, Kirtland Hills)

Bluebells, Girdled Road Reservation

Trout Lily

Monday, September 7, 2015

New Bridge over Big Creek at Girdled Road Reservation

One of our favorite parks is the Girdled Road Reservation. The hike from Radcliffe Road to Girdled Road is about 2.6 miles, give or take (the last stretch involves a lot of steps!). The round trip is then about 5.2 miles. Lake MetroParks has just finished building a suspension foot bridge linking the Skok Meadow property, entered from Rt. 608, to the Girdled Road Reservation.

The Girdled Road Reservation has magnificent mature forests, ponds, Big Creek itself, some small cataracts, many smaller creeks, and lots of ups and downs. In the spring it has magnificent displays of wildflowers. We love it in all seasons.
This beautiful new suspension bridge links Skok Meadow to Girdled Road Reservation

Looking north up Big Creek

Linda crossing the bridge


Reminds Linda of the swinging bridges in Kentucky!

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Great Spring for Wildflowers in Northeast Ohio!

Winter lasted almost forever this year and spring was late a-comin'. But it is glorious springtime here, and the leaf canopy will close in a week or so. So it's the last real chance to see Northeast Ohio's early wildflowers. This year we have hiked in North Chagrin, Girdled Road, Big Creek, Penitentiary Glenn, and other parks to see the flowers. Here are some of them:

Bluets--North Chagrin Reservation

Virginia Bluebells.


Yellow violets.

Spring Beauties.

Bellwort
Wild Geranium.

Violets


A hillside full of trillium--Big Creek, Geauga County.

Heaptica

Trillium--Big Creek.


Leaves of the mayapple.

Squirrel Corn


A serviceberry/sarvis up on Little Mountain

Marsh marigolds, Holden Arboretum

Birch flowers (I believe)

An ancient sugar maple returning to the soil.

Vernal pool at Girdled Road Reservation.

Leaves of Bloodroot.

Coltsfoot



Jack-in-the-pulpit



Fern fiddleheads.

Cutleaf Toothwort.

Trout Lily

Sugar maple leaves.

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Fall Walk Along Big Creek--Girdled Road Reservation

Spectacular Orange Fungus

Milkweed and blue aster

View of Big Creek

Small falls along Big Creek

Linda by the falls

Tulip poplar across Big Creek

Fruit of Jack-in-the-Pulpit