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Archives for February 2022

On the Rocks

February 27, 2022 by Denise Brake 2 Comments

It seems like the world is on the rocks right now. Experiencing difficulties. Deteriorating. Eroding. Spoiled. Likely to fail? Where opinions are confused with facts. Where experts are told they don’t know what they’re talking about. There’s deep division and distrust of ‘the other.’ Where a pandemic has killed millions of people. Where climate change is impacting so many in devastating ways. Where a warmonger can invade a neighboring country and wreak havoc and death. The phrase ‘on the rocks’ used in this way came from the idea of a ship running aground on rocks and breaking apart. The idiom is often used to describe failing businesses and marriages. Torn apart. Angry. On a sinking ship. What happens when we’re on the rocks?

One sunny day in the beginning days of the new year, we traveled west of Austin into the heart of the Hill Country to Pedernales Falls State Park. We spent hours on the rocks—literally. It was my most favorite place to visit on this Texas trip—an amazing landscape of exposed bedrock, pools and streams of water, fossils, and Nature’s architecture.

The exposed rock is called Marble Falls limestone created over 300 million years ago when most of Texas was covered by a sea. Other rock formed above it, and over the eons the granite layer below pushed up the limestone into these tilted formations. When the Pedernales River formed from a spring and gained power with flash flooding, it cut the canyon where the Falls now lie. Since that time, the water has eroded and shaped the ancient rock beds into amazing formations.

Flash flooding moves rocks and sand, so the Falls landscape is always changing. A beach of sand has fallen from the moving water as it churned over the last ridge of rocks. It does not have to be raining in the Park for the Falls to flood—if the rain is intense ‘upstream,’ flooding can occur under clear skies.

A reminder to get to higher ground if water starts to rise and/or get cloudy.

Potholes of all sizes appeared in the rock. They are formed when rushing water churns small and large rocks in a swirling motion, thus eroding the bedrock to form holes.

We and other hikers scrambled on the rocks, sometimes climbing up, sometimes sliding down, picking our way through the maze of streams, pools, and crevices.

This ‘beach’ was a deposit of mostly same-sized rocks that we slowly ‘hounded’ our way through. I think we could have spent hours just in this spot!

X marks the spot.

Every pool was different—some at the bottom of the Falls had green algae growing in them; others were as clear and mirror-like as an infinity pool. Some were shallow and stone-lined; others were deep and dark.

Pothole with the large ‘churning’ rocks at the bottom.

The sides of the River Falls were scattered with boulders of all sizes that had been ‘deposited’ there by rushing water over the millennia. The present day jewel tones of the water were so beautiful and calming and combined with the sandy tans of the rocks brought me an uplifting joy.

As we climbed up the Falls, the rock we walked on changed. It literally looked like mud—hard, fossilized mud—which of course was exactly what it was. And this is where we began to see tracks! Some of the track fossils were indented into the mud rock; others were raised up from the rock. I would love to have seen the animals that made these tracks!

Along the ‘mud’ rock section, striated layers of rocks created a wall by the River. Ashe Juniper trees, Sotol plants, and cactus clung to the barely-there soil. Caves had been carved out of the walls and rounded ‘pillow’ rocks softened by the water.

A large cave high on the rock wall held a house-sized boulder. Blue, yellow, and white rock colors wept down the face of the gray wall. It was one of the most intriguing spots in the Park.

We saw more fossils—one that looked like a curved spine and others called Crinoid fossils—ancient sea animals that looked like plants and sometimes called ‘sea lilies.’

The death of a loved one can make a person feel like they are on the rocks. Failed dreams, faltering relationships, and illness can do the same. It is not a good feeling when the ideological ship one is sailing on comes crashing and thrashing on the rocks of reality. The ‘worldly’ problems seem even more daunting and out of our control. How does one fight an evil power and an existential global threat when they both feel like a flash flood that could sweep us all away? But it’s not really the rocks that are to blame for the destruction—it is the storm. The storm can be the weather or greed or narcissism or fear or hatred or ignorance. While our time on the rocks in Texas held some risk and danger—flash flooding and deep crevices—it was more about how we navigated them. The rocks themselves were grounding. They held the long history of our earth in all its changes—we could see the evidence. Storms can change us, erode us, wear us down, but we can put our faith and our feet on the grounding rock of Goodness. The opposite of ‘on the rocks’ is thriving or flourishing. With hope, engagement, positive relationships, and tenacity, the people of Goodness can overcome the storms of destruction.

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Filed Under: Winter Tagged With: erosion, flash floods, fossils, on the rocks, Pedernales Falls State Park, potholes, rocks, water

Labor of Love

February 20, 2022 by Denise Brake 2 Comments

What have you done in your life that has been a ‘labor of love?’ The phrase is defined as ‘productive work performed voluntarily without material reward or compensation,’ and it’s usually something you really enjoy doing. Childbirth is literally a labor of love (not high on the enjoyment list), as is parenting and grand-parenting. Coaching youth sports, caring for an elderly family member, volunteering for a food bank or the Red Cross, or making quilts for those in need are just a few examples of how a person engages in a ‘labor of love.’

Although my last five posts have been from our very warm time in Texas over Christmas and New Years (with a couple more ‘warm’ posts to go), I want to let all the snow-starved people know that central Minnesota has been staying cold and snowy since before we left for Texas in the middle of December…

…until we got back in January…

Deer tracks and where they pawed through the snow

…until now.

It makes the contrast of writing about palm trees, agave plants, and bamboo all the more stark as I look out the windows at deep snow and snuggle in my fleece. The Cactus and Succulent Garden is a part of Zilker Botanical Garden in Austin, and while a previous freezing night had the staff scrambling to cover blooming bedding plants, it was quite a wonder to be wandering through a botanical garden in January!

The most intriguing area was the Taniguchi Japanese Garden. It was built by Isamu Taniguchi when he was 70 years old on a three acre hillside in the relatively new public garden. He worked for eighteen months with no contract or salary—a true labor of love. The garden opened in 1970.

Bamboo

The three main components of a Japanese garden are water, rocks, and evergreen plants. While Western gardens are mostly constructed for visual appeal, Japanese gardens center around spiritual or philosophical ideas. Taniguchi wanted all who entered to feel peace, and that is coming from a person who experienced the upheaval of internment after the start of World War II. The garden contains a series of ponds with a connecting stream flowing through them, waterfalls, rock structures and sculptures, evergreen shrubs and plants, bridges, pathways, and pops of color from brilliant Japanese Maples.

Cyperus or Umbrella plant

One pond, under the watchful eye of a heron sculpture, was the home of a school of colorful Koi fish. They were eager to see if we had any food for them.

Another beautiful garden is the Hartman Prehistoric Garden. Petrified wood, Palmetto Palms, waterfalls, ancient Bald Cypress and Gingko trees, and an impressive dinosaur sculpture made for another-worldly experience.

Yellow Gingko leaves and brown Bald Cypress fronds

As a Northerner who loves snow and cold, it was an extraordinary time to spend those weeks in Texas where, most of the time, it was even warmer than their normally warm Winter weather. Walking through a botanical garden two days after the New Year was surreal and beautiful. Gardening is usually a labor of love, but designing and building a three acre garden after a lifetime of farming and the trauma of internment, puts Isamu Taniguchi in an elite group. It has become his legacy—an ongoing gift of peace to all who enter the Garden.

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Filed Under: Winter Tagged With: Austin, bamboo, Gingko, Japanese garden, Koi fish, labor of love, waterfall, Zilker Botanical Garden

Refresh Your Soul

February 13, 2022 by Denise Brake 6 Comments

How did you welcome in the New Year last month? It was another pandemic year that the collective community of the world was glad to let go of to pursue high hopes for a better 2022. Austin, Texas held its 42nd annual Polar Bear Plunge on New Year’s Day…and we were there! Calling it a Polar Bear Plunge is a misnomer to me, coming from a state where they actually cut holes in the thick ice for people to plunge into truly frigid water! But that’s okay—it’s all relative. Austin’s Polar Bear Plunge is held at Barton Springs Municipal Pool, a natural, spring-fed pool with limestone walls, green grassy banks, and clear, turquoise water. The spring-fed water stays at a very respectable 68 to 70 degrees year round. On this New Year’s Day, the air temperature was in the 70’s (a common summer’s day temp in Minnesota) and hundreds, if not thousands of people were out jumping into the New Year and washing off the old.

After my family swam and played in the tepid waters, we walked along the well-used trail that follows Barton Creek from the pool to Lady Bird Lake. There were people running, walking, strolling, biking, etc. on one side of us, and on the other side, creatures of all sorts were swimming, sunning, resting, and plunging into their new year also. Turtles were everywhere! A group of turtles is called a ‘bale’—we saw many bales of turtles!

All along the Creek and Lady Bird Lake were huge Bald Cypress trees who love to have their feet in the water. The slow-growing, long-lived trees help prevent erosion along the banks during flash floods. The knobby protrusions at the base of the tree are called cypress ‘knees.’ They grow from horizontal roots and are theorized to transport air to the water-laden roots, along with anchoring the tree in its often precarious waterside position.

Aaron, our ever-vigilant snake guy, was the one to notice the big reptile lounging on a fallen tree branch. The Diamondback Watersnake is the largest nonvenomous water snake in North America. They like to lazily dine on fish and amphibians by dipping their heads into the water from their tree branch perches.

On another tree branch overhanging the water was a white Muscovy duck, a unique waterfowl originating in South America. They prefer to spend time in trees and less time swimming, compared to other ducks. They are more sensitive to cold than Mallard-related ducks, and they hiss instead of quack!

As Barton Creek merged into Lady Bird Lake, we saw many kayakers, paddleboarders, and rowers, along with a commotion of American Coots.

Blooming water plants floated on the Lake along with the humans in watercrafts and all sorts of waterfowl. A gorgeous, exquisitely-feathered Wood Duck greeted the New Year in his winter home.

It is a legitimate human tendency to want to wash away an old year, especially ones that were as confounding as the previous two. We want to be done with the virus, the death, the masks, the rules, and the uncertainty. We want life to be ‘normal’ again. Yet, there is something to be said by having a hardship be the experience of everyone. It helps to level the playing field, because truth be told, large numbers of people experience disease, death, unfair rules, and ongoing uncertainty even in their ‘normal’ lives. There are always ideas, habits, and behaviors we need to let go of in our lives, and the New Year is a favored time to do so. We can pursue our high hopes with renewed vigor. Matt Curtis of the Friends of Barton Springs Pool Polar Bear Plunge said, “This is an exciting opportunity to refresh your soul in the waters of Austin.” Refresh your soul. Perhaps that is the anchor we need in our lives in order to navigate the difficult times and to reach for our dreams.

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Filed Under: Winter Tagged With: Austin, bald cypress, Barton Springs Pool, ducks, Polar Bear Plunge, refresh your soul, snakes, turtles

Turn Back Time

February 6, 2022 by Denise Brake 6 Comments

Nothing like the death of a loved one to make a person wish to turn back time. I have strained to remember the details of the last time we saw Chris’ brother, how he was, what he said. There is no doubt the pandemic ‘got in the way’—even without us knowing. We assumed we would see everybody when this dreaded thing was over. There are regrets, if onlys, missed opportunities, mistakes, and omissions—I really don’t know how one gets through the loss of a loved one without those self-flagellating thoughts. I think it’s just part of the process. But since it’s ‘part of the process,’ it too will pass. We can move on from the regrets—I know, easier said than done.

This past weekend we attended a memorial service for Jon down in Kansas City. It was finalizing—exactly one of the purposes of funerals and memorials. It helps our disbelieving minds believe it. The officiant offered prayers and condolences, then suggested we turn back time to remember something about Jon that we admired or respected…and to incorporate that quality or action into our own lives. It was a powerful suggestion.

During our Christmas trip to Austin, Texas we drove south for a day of exploring and hiking at Palmetto State Park. It was like we were turning back time to prehistoric days. No matter where we go, if we pay attention to the geology of the area, we are already in prehistoric days.

Spanish moss hung from the trees. It is an epiphyte, a member of the Bromeliad family that gathers its nutrients and water from the air and rain. It rarely kills the trees it inhabits, and in this part of Texas, it prefers Live Oak and Bald Cypress trees.

The San Marcos River runs through the park. It is not like most rivers I’m used to seeing. In many places it has cut a deep gorge into the landscape with bare banks and muddy, silty water. There is erosion and damage from flash flooding—the banks cannot recover between the aqua assaults.

And what prehistoric mud walker was here ambling to and fro? (The very primitive possum.)

Parts of the park did not look like the typical Texas landscape—it was swampy and tropical. Dwarf Palmetto Palm shrubs lined the edges of the water, and thick, woody Rattan Vines climbed trees and hung like ropes from the canopy. I could easily imagine a dinosaur walking amongst them.

One of the dichotomies of the tropical park was when we saw the swampy palms next to the desert-dwelling cacti like the flat-faced Prickly Pear and the pencil-twigged Cholla cactus. What a strange combination.

We left the swampy area and walked the Mesquite Flats Trail where some native Mesquite trees still held on to their leaves. Drought tolerant and tough, they are considered invasive in ranching country where they displace the grass, especially in overgrazed areas.

A bright green ball of leaves with shiny, pearl-like seeds hung from a bare-branched tree. It’s easy to see Mistletoe in the winter! It is a hemi-parasite that invades a branch in order to use water and nutrients from the tree. It’s Greek name ‘Phoradendron’ means ‘thief of the tree.’ Another dichotomy—Christmas ‘kissing ball’ decoration and real-life tree thief.

Throughout the woods, large invisible webs stretched between trees, and if we looked closely, we saw the colorful, crab-like spiders called Spiny-backed Orbweavers. What cool spiders!

I was surprised how much grass was growing under the trees—not something we generally see in the woods up north. But everywhere was evidence of the power of water when it does flow—deep cuts and masses of exposed roots.

Walking on, we saw mud wasps building homes and an armored Leaf-footed Bug sucking the nutrients from the Palmetto Palm leaves.

We encountered a tiny bit of Spring in December—a patch of Wild Onions with their fragrant scents and simple, white flowers.

My favorite critter of the day was a Green Anole lizard sunning himself on the outside of a bridge railing. His cool, detached demeanor dismissed our noisy admiration and paparazzi picture-taking. He was the closest thing to my turn-back-time-dinosaur in the tropical swamp of Palmetto State Park.

I love finding these unusual, out-of-the-ordinary ecosystems—it reminds me of the mystery and diversity of Mother Nature. Why was this tropical swamp here? One clue was a now-extinct ‘mud boil’ in the park, where hot water deep in the earth bubbled to the surface—it was ‘boiling’ until the 1970’s. The unfathomable ways of Mother Nature mirror the unfathomable ways of life and death of us. There’s no way to explain the birth of our beings and no way to explain our earthly departure (beyond the physiology of it all.) We are left with the unknown, the mystery, the dichotomies, the joys, the regrets, and the process. So we hold on to faith so the loss doesn’t wash us away. We hold on to hope that another season is springing up inside us even in the depth of our winter. And we hold on to the love that was there and always will be, world without end. Amen.

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Filed Under: Winter Tagged With: Green Anole lizard, life and death, mistletoe, Palmetto palms, Palmetto State Park, Rattan vine, Spanish moss, turn back time

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I love Nature! I love its beauty, its constancy, its adaptiveness, its intricacies, and its surprises. I think Nature can teach us about ourselves and make us better people. Read More…

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