• Home
  • About Me

NorthStarNature

Appreciating the Beauty and Wisdom of Nature

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter
  • Bring Nature Indoors
You are here: Home / Archives for bald eagles

Without a Map or an App

April 12, 2020 by Denise Brake 2 Comments

In this stay-at-home/ social distancing/ unprecedented time of the Covid-19 pandemic, we find ourselves without a map or an app. How do we do this? Which way is the best way to go? Where do we end up if we follow this path? The unknown is unnerving. Even as the hope of Spring is pulling us out of the dark, bleak Winter, there is still bleakness all around—death, sickness, chaos, partisanship, job loss, fear, hunger, and more. We haven’t done this before! What are we supposed to do?!

Twelve days ago Chris and I drove west to Birch Lakes State Forest. We had been there once before, a number of years ago. The gate was closed at the entrance, as the unplowed, sandy road was still snowy in places and soggy in the rest. We parked by the sign, the only ones—the only human ones, that is—to inhabit the forest for the afternoon. Before we were even out of the car, we saw an eagle circling above our heads. They are so impressive and free—watching them fly takes me out of my earthly worries into the clear blue strata above.

The pond across the road was still ice-covered, the snowmobile tracks still visible, the trees in the forest still unadorned. As much as we want our beautiful, full-blown Spring, this is our Spring reality.

Before we left the car side, we heard a high-spirited screeching in the sky. Two hawks were singing and swooping in a joyful sky dance! The mated pair flew apart, then close together (one carrying a stick in its beak) with grace and energy for the Spring ritual of mating, nesting, and raising a family.

It was only when we saw a path and entered the forest that I remembered we didn’t have a map of the trails. No worries—even though we hadn’t hiked in this area before, I knew Birch Lake was at the end of the road, and we would find our way.

With the exception of a few Fir and Spruce trees, the landscape was brown and gray—until we walked a little farther and looked a little closer. I saw a bright red dollop in the brown leaves—one of the earliest, showiest fungi—the Scarlet Elf Cup.

Vibrant green Sedge grass looked unscathed by five months of being buried under snow.

Fungi was the star of the show in the brown woods, in color, texture, and form with expressive names like Turkey Tail, Oyster, and Artist’s Conk.

Lush green moss covered areas of trees, logs, and ground in impressive mini-scapes.

From the hardwood, deciduous forest we entered a quiet, moss-covered Spruce forest. The sun streaked through in an other-worldly way.

A number of times the trail diverged in the woods—which way to go? Where will it lead? I would choose one. The hills were steep in places, and the north faces still had quite a bit of snow. One lower area had a population of Leatherwood trees—short, almost shrub-like trees with pliable, yet strong branches. They bloom in early Spring with tiny yellow flowers before getting any leaves, but we were still a little too early to see them.

We found evidence of the non-human occupants of the forest—a clump of deer hair in a patch of snow mold and a deer rub where the bucks rub their antlers against a young tree.

The landscape looked bleak after the snow melt, but small signs of the hope of Spring could be found—the moss was flowering!

The ice was melting!

The water was flowing!

The geese were flying!

With no map, we navigated our way through the forest and ended up at Birch Lake. We walked back to the car in the soggy sand road marked occasionally by fresh deer tracks.

When we left the State Forest, we circled around Birch Lake by car, and we saw a huge, dark eagle’s nest in the distant trees. Our hike had begun and ended with an eagle—one high in the sky with his bird’s eye view and eagle eyes looking for food and the other sitting high in a tree with her nest of eggs or young ones.

The unknown doesn’t need to be unnerving—it can be an adventure. How do we do this? One day at a time with patience, faith, and love. Which way is the best way to go? Follow the signs (six feet apart) and maintain that inside sense of direction. Where do we end up if we follow this path? Expertise, knowledge, science, and history of past hard times will guide our path in this new time with the novel virus. What does a bird’s eye view show us about how we were living in the past, how we are living now, and how we want to choose to live in the future? This is our Spring reality—not how we’d like it to be, certainly not beautiful, definitely bleak in many ways, but there are small signs of hope everywhere when we look closely. No worries, dear people of our Earth, the process and the path will unfold. We will find our way.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Spring Tagged With: bald eagles, Birch Lakes State Forest, Corona virus, fungi, hawks, ice, Paper Birch trees

Start by Surveying Your Territory—You May See the Dead Deer

November 25, 2018 by Denise Brake 2 Comments

It was unusual to see an eagle just sitting in a tree along the highway.  They do that beside the River in search of fish or close to their nests.  It’s usually hawks that sit in trees or on posts surveying the ditches for signs of mouse movement in patient anticipation of a tasty tidbit.  Once I got his photo and we drove on, I commented to Chris how unusual it was to see an eagle in a tree beside the road.  While I had been staring at the eagle, Chris had been surveying the road behind us where we were pulled over and the road before us where he noticed a dead deer in the ditch.  I was totally focused on the eagle and didn’t see the dead deer—and that was why he was sitting there in the tree.

We continued to our destination—Wildwood County Park—for a chill-busting hike in the Maple and Basswood forest where some of the towering Maples are 300 years old.  It is a well-managed forest; tractor tracks followed the ski trail where freshly cut logs of downed trees were piled in the scant snow, and I didn’t see any Buckthorn invading the woods.

We crossed a creek flowing under a layer of ice with bridges of fallen logs—some bear-sized, some mouse-sized—connecting one side with the other.

With no leaves on the trees and no ‘greenery,’ the trees themselves became the focal points—the trunks and branches, the colors and textures.

We found a ‘fort’ made of branches, a shelter from the winds on the ridge.  Would you stay here?

One of the dead Basswood trees was obliterated by a Pileated Woodpecker.  Huge white patches of drilled wood stuck out in the gray day, and a hefty pile of shavings gathered at the foot of the tree.

At another creek, two deer paths diverged from the creek into the woods.  Which way would you go?

In any mature forest there are many downed trees—all a part of Nature’s recycling program.  Oftentimes we forget about the extensive root systems that anchor trees and keep them nourished.  An eroded bank exposed some of the roots of this oak tree, reminding me of the unseen network of support.

A large burl interrupted the smooth flow of a tree trunk.  The dark, bumpy, tumor-like growth is caused by an injury, a genetic mutation, insects, or fungal and bacterial infections.  The cells divide more rapidly than normal (like many cancers) or there is excessive cell enlargement (hypertrophy).  Burls are coveted by woodworkers as the wood has unique and beautiful grain patterns due to knots from dormant buds and the swirls of the unusual growth.

The woods of Wildwood were bare and stripped down on this cool, gray day with interesting things to see and life lessons to learn if we are so inclined.

 

I’m sure the eagle spotted the dead deer when he was soaring high above the ground surveying his territory—it’s what they are meant to do.  The deer would provide food for many days—if the eagle could safely access it.  They are not swift on the wing to get out of the way of cars, so from his perch in the tree, he could watch for an opportunity to feed on the carcass.  Seeing the eagle and not the deer reminded me that we ‘see’ what we look for, what we are focused on and many times, we don’t see what else is ‘in the picture.’  That’s when it helps to have other eyes and other points of view—Chris saw the deer—the reason why the eagle was there.  He kept watch for danger in passing cars as I looked only at the eagle.  The Wildwood showed how bridges connect one side with another—natural things like logs, laughter, love, and lively conversation.  What creates our shelters from the wrathful winds and storms of life?  We must build them log by log, bit by bit.  Is it prayer or yoga or daily walks?  What makes each of us resilient?  What do we do with the old, dead parts that no longer work?  We mine them for the morsels that will continue to sustain us, then discard the rest.  We choose our paths, and all the while, we remember our network of support, that we don’t make our way in this world by ourselves, by only what is seen.  Who holds us up?  Who sends nourishment to us?  Who helps build the shelters and bridges?  The burled tree reminds us that ugly things can be transformed into beautiful creations.  It usually takes time, hard work, dedication, and the ability to see beyond the ugliness.  When we survey our territory and see and learn the lessons the eagle and the woods have to teach us, we can see the opportunities, not be blindsided by the dangers, stay safe in our shelters with those who sustain us, and create Beauty for all to see.

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Fall Tagged With: bald eagles, deer, life lessons, trees, woods

A Snapshot of Our Lives

October 7, 2018 by Denise Brake 4 Comments

What would a snapshot of your day look like?  How about snapshots of your life?  There were many times when the kids were growing up that we took them to outdoor events celebrating a variety of holidays, animals, and seasons—a butterfly festival, May Day celebration, harvest festival, etc.  We have a few candid snapshots of some of those events—when cameras were extra things to carry around with all the paraphernalia needed for three kids of various ages.

Last weekend we attended the Wildlife Festival at Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge.  It was a chilly, raw day—as we walked from the car, most of us wished we had more and warmer clothes.  Babies were wrapped in snowsuits and cute fleece hats.  An outdoor fire and an indoor gift shop were popular places to warm up.  Tents and tables with snakes, birds, furs, and photographs engaged the kids and adults alike.  We had two of our adult kids with us, plus one, reminiscent of the events in years past.  Following are snapshots of our day with captions from some of the five of us:

  1.  Morning surprise   2.  A Walking Stick before our walk in the sticks   3.  Stickin’ around

  1.  Eagle eye   2.  Injured glory   3.  Head and shoulders above the rest

  1.  Feathered friend   2.  Small but mighty   3.  Bundled up

  1.  Who?!   2.  Feeling owley   3.  Here’s lookin’ at you, kid

  1.  Busy beavers   2.  Construction zone   3.  I could sure use a toothpick

  1.  Not mush room   2.  Unstoppable   3.  Mushrooms are having a moment

  1.  Hipsters in red   2.  Roses for next year   3.  Hips don’t lie

  1.  Feel the burn   2.  Tree-mains   3.  Vertical coal

  1.  All the sad prairie   2.  Cactus of Minnesota   3.  Prairie sentries

  1.  Mess ‘o Milkweed   2.  Fluff in the wind   3.  It’s time to sail

  1.  Hanging on   2.  Feathered and tethered   3.  Clinging

  1.  Missouri memories   2.  The circle of life   3.  Bittersweet goodbye

 

A snapshot is a quick record of something or someone; a brief appraisal or summary.  My photos and our captions are snapshots of our day together.  They can stir memories of past times and connect us with a quiet part of ourselves that we may not be aware of.  How do we walk through life?  What do we see or not want to see?  How do we carry ourselves?  Who are we really?  What is the work of our lives?  What’s stopping us?  How do we want our future to look?  How do we look at things from a different point of view?  Who do we surround ourselves with?  How do we realize our mission?  What do we do when we get stuck?  How do we gather the sweet fruit from our memories?  We are all entwined in this circle of life—each of us only a snapshot in the huge panorama of our Earth and its history.  But each snapshot is important, and this time is our time.  The mushrooms and all of us are having a moment.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Fall Tagged With: bald eagles, beaver tree, birds, fruit, milkweed, prairie, Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge

The Easy Way

September 16, 2018 by Denise Brake 4 Comments

A ship in the harbor is safe. But that’s not what ships are built for.  –John A. Shedd

We got our tickets and were told the Taylors Falls Princess was docked in Interstate State Park, as the water was too rough and rushing over the rapids at the usual dock.  Up the hill, turn left, past the park entrance, and down the hill.  The Princess is a paddlewheel boat operated by Taylors Falls Scenic Boat Tours—a family owned and run business on the Saint Croix River since 1906.  The upper deck was already filled with site-seers, so we took our seats at the front of the lower deck to get the best standing spots once the gate was closed.  It was an easy way to explore the Saint Croix River, complete with a knowledgeable tour guide and seasoned captain.

This area of the river cutting through huge rock formations is called ‘dalles,’ a French word for rapids of a river through a narrow gorge.  The base rock is basalt, a dark, fine-grained volcanic rock that was later covered with a shallow sea that deposited sandstone above the basalt.  When glaciers began to melt, the St. Croix River was formed.  When the melting ice water intersected an old fracture in the basalt, it took the easy way, creating a sharp bend here at Angle Rock.

Our tour guide pointed out rock formations that looked like various things—Lion’s Head, Elephant’s Head, and the Old Man of the Dalles.

Supposedly, French fur traders of the 1600’s saw a cross in this rock face and named the river after the ‘Holy Cross,’ though the River was known by many different names before and after that time.

We paddled down the River on the Princess and saw many paddlers in colorful kayaks and Alumacraft canoes who weren’t taking it quite as easy as we were!  The Saint Croix River is part of the National Wild and Scenic Riverways system established in 1968.  

We saw an eagle and eagle’s nest…

…and a gaggle of geese taking it easy on the shore.

My favorite story by the tour guide was about the island that wasn’t supposed to be there.  When they were building the road on the Minnesota side of the River bluffs, the contractor told his assistant to order two tons of dynamite, and she mistakenly ordered twenty tons.  He blew the bluff into the River!  Is that an easy way to make an island or was the assistant an easy scapegoat to his big problem?

The Saint Croix River begins in Wisconsin about 20 miles south of Lake Superior, and the last 125 miles marks the border between Wisconsin and Minnesota where it then merges with the Mississippi.  The Interstate State Park is on both the Wisconsin side and Minnesota side around the Dalles area. 

The Saint Croix has been one of the cleanest rivers in the Midwest, but like most lakes and streams in the state, it has a problem with nutrient (phosphorus) overload in the summer.  The dark brownish-red color of the water is from tannins that come from decaying plant material that lines the shores of the River; tannins are not considered to be a pollutant, but we did wonder about the constant stream of white foam.  

 

Our easy eighty-minute excursion on the paddlewheel boat seemed to go fast—the River and the rocks were beautiful.  The history and stories by our tour guide were interesting and informative.  Our easy way of exploring the River and bluffs cost us money in order for other people and machines to do ‘the work.’  We were safe within the rails of the boat (never in their long history have they ever had to use the life vests.)  Franklin D. Roosevelt said, “A smooth sea never made a skillful sailor.”  The easy way doesn’t challenge us—it may keep us safe, be the way we’ve always done things, and be the most comfortable for us.  But is that what we’re built for?  Is that what we’re born for?  How do we build roads where once there were rocks and trees?  How do we make an island?  Our day at the Saint Croix River was just beginning.  The easy way was over. 

To be continued… 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Summer Tagged With: bald eagles, Interstate State Parks, Saint Croix River, The Dalles of St. Croix, water, woods

Zero to Sixty

May 27, 2018 by Denise Brake Leave a Comment

In two weeks’ time, we have accelerated from Spring to Summer.  The normal progression of leafing out and blooming has been disrupted this year—things seem rather confused.  The very warm temperatures of these last days have pushed some things to bloom, while at the same time the early bloomers are just catching up from the delay a late snowstorm produced.  So now the daffodils, honeysuckle, lilacs, crabapples, viburnums, flag irises, and anemones are all blooming at the same time!  Instead of Spring slowly unfolding in its progressive, orderly way, it’s been like a tire-spinning Ferrari going from zero to sixty in 2.9 seconds!

On Mother’s Day two weeks ago, we took a short hike around Rockville County Park.  The leaves were just emerging from the trees, which made bird watching easier.  We saw a Baltimore Oriole and a Rose-breasted Grosbeak and heard their beautiful songs.

An adult Eagle floated in the sky above us looking for food to feed the two hungry ‘babies’ in the nest.  They have a few years until they grow into the elegance of their parents.

A tall, showy Serviceberry was blooming in the woods, looking almost out of place with the other bare, brown-with-green-tinged trees.

Later, back at home, a lone turkey wandered through the front yard.  She circled around the garage, then was scared by a tractor going down the road.  She ran to the backyard and flew up into the oak trees, defying her size!  She stayed there for quite a while, cautiously looking around to determine her safety.  Finally she opened her wings and glided to the ground.

We had a few rain showers in the last two weeks, though it still seems very dry, especially as the temperatures have gone so unseasonably high this past week.  The rainy days helped the Purple Leaf Plum leaf out and bloom, helped the Purple Flag Irises open their tissue-paper-thin flowers, and gave the Baltimore Oriole a shower.

On another trek to Eagle Park, we saw Purple Martins sitting on the porches of their house.  Just as we got out of the car, they all flew away, and I saw a Hawk capture one in the air, going zero to sixty!  He flew to a branch of a tree with the Purple Martin in his claws.

Then he dropped it!  He looked down at his fallen prey but did not fly down to get it as we watched!

 

It seems like we waited so long for Spring to come this year, and then when it did finally show up, it zoomed into summer—what crazy weather!  I remember when the kids were younger how we waited for milestones—when they walked, talked, tied their own shoes, started school, and dozens of others.  While the waiting seemed long, when they finally passed a milestone, things started to move faster, and we looked back thinking how time had zoomed by so quickly!  How could ten years, twenty years, now thirty years have passed since we held these dear babies in our arms?  Crazy time.  These children of ours—we try to keep them safe, provide food, shelter, learning and love, help them to bloom, and teach them to fly.  Sometimes desires and dreams fall from their grasps—from our grasps—and we look down and decide whether or not we will pick them up again or let them go.  We all take a couple of years or a lifetime to grow into our elegance.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Spring Tagged With: bald eagles, birds, flowers, time, wild turkeys, woods

Earth, Teach Us on this Earth Day

April 22, 2018 by Denise Brake Leave a Comment

 

EARTH, TEACH ME

An Ute Prayer

Earth teach me quiet—as the grasses are still with new light.

Earth teach me suffering—as old stones suffer with memory.

Earth teach me humility—as blossoms are humble with beginning.

Earth teach me caring—as mothers nurture their young.

Earth teach me courage—as the tree that stands alone.

Earth teach me limitation—as the ant that crawls on the ground.

Earth teach me freedom—as the eagle that soars in the sky.

Earth teach me acceptance—as the leaves that die each fall.

Earth teach me renewal—as the seed that rises in the spring.

Earth teach me to forget myself—as melted snow forgets its life.

Earth teach me to remember kindness—as dry fields weep with rain.

Let the words of this beautiful prayer float around you as they are sung by this talented choir.

 

Earth Day is a special day to remember and celebrate all that is good and beneficial about our Earth.  We are the stewards of this Home to us all.  And just as caregivers to children or elders know, the cared-for also teach us in profound ways.  The Earth and all of Nature—our Mother Earth, our Mother Nature—can teach us qualities we need to know.  Are we receptive?  We can learn listening skills from the quiet of grasses in the morning light.  We can learn resilience from the suffering of our earth and rocks from exploitation and apply that to the heavy stones we carry of our burdensome memories.  Like a child, we can cultivate wonder and humility as we watch the miraculous unfolding of flowers.  We can learn responsibility and how to nurture vulnerable creations as we watch animal parents care for their young.  The solitude of a lone tree can offer us a model of courage and fortitude in the face of harsh conditions.  When we feel small and inadequate, we can remember how the ant lives with limitations, and in that reality, can actually perform great feats.  An eagle in the sky models freedom and possibilities.  We can learn acceptance and peace from the cycle of life.  There are yearly lessons of renewal and rejuvenation with each Spring.  We can learn about transformation and transcendence as we watch snow melt to water, water turn to vapor, vapor fall as rain.  And as that rain provides the very basic need of water to dry plant life, we can learn about kindness, philanthropy, and grace.  There, but by the grace of God, go I.  Imagine our world, our Earth, our lives if everyone learned these eleven lessons.  Happy Earth Day! 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Spring Tagged With: bald eagles, deer, earth day, granite, pasque flower

A Slow Slide and Adversity

March 18, 2018 by Denise Brake Leave a Comment

“If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant; if we did not sometimes taste adversity, prosperity would not be so welcome.”   –Anne Bradstreet

I knew my third pregnancy would be my last, and I was intentional in being present and grateful for the miracle of growing and carrying a new human being.  I really liked being pregnant and had had easy pregnancies before.  That was about to change!  Morning sickness was my constant companion for most of the way through two trimesters, and I spent more than my share of time on the couch and in the bathroom.  Saltine crackers were my friends, and the smell of tuna and the act of brushing my teeth were my enemies.  Yet every day, I was grateful.  As my abdomen grew large, time was slow and sweet as I welcomed each and every thing with my newest babe.

We have had a cold winter—not as snowy as most, but very cold.  Spring officially arrives on Tuesday, and I find myself being present and grateful for the chilly, icy mornings along with the sunny, above-freezing days.  I am not wishing Winter away.  The snow melt reveals the winter’s pile of sunflower seed shells under the bird feeder where every kind of creature, bird and mammal alike, have rummaged for the high-fat black oil seeds that slipped through the cracks.

The snow melts in the strong sunshine during the day and hardens into crusty, compacted crystals during the freezing nights.  The power of the sun is evident after a winter of low-in-the-sky traveling—snowbanks recede even when the temperature is below freezing.

Lavender is still stuck in the snow; leaves and sticks in the yard absorb the warmth and melt the ice and snow around them.

The wonder of Spring is beginning to reveal itself with Birch and Hazelnut catkins and swollen Maple tree buds.

Melted snow pooled into a small stream-bed of rocks—liquid by day, ice by night.

Geese, Trumpeter Swans, and even some Sandhill Cranes have taken flight through the blue skies, announcing their presence with their distinctive songs.

The pair of pairs of Eagles are at their nests—time will reveal whether each have viable eggs.  The oldest pair was not brooding on the nest, but one was sitting on a branch when we came by.  One of the younger Eagles at the other nest was keeping eggs warm.

Saturday’s surprise was the spotting of two Robins!  Iconic signs of Spring.  I wonder if they were confused by the snow still in the yard!

 

I like how we slide slowly out of Winter into Spring.  Longer days and melting snow remind us how far from the Winter Solstice we are—we’ve made it through another season of cold and snow!  While the dormancy of Winter is important for gathering nutrients and resting the system, it also makes Spring and Summer that much sweeter!  The mindful morning sickness I felt in my last pregnancy was, in essence, getting me ready for the adversity and long recovery after the birth.  What does adversity reveal to us?  It reveals our strengths and endurance.  It shows our weaknesses, and the places we are stuck.  It magnifies the cracks in the system that we’ve slipped through.  Adversity allows us to learn our own distinctive song of ourselves and how to sing it.  It teaches us to absorb the warmth and power of Love that melts away the obstacles that have been holding us back.  Because of this, I do not wish Winter or adversity away anymore, but I sure do welcome Spring and the good fortune that lay on the other side.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Spring Tagged With: bald eagles, buds, geese, snow

This Huge Nest Called Earth

April 22, 2017 by Denise Brake 4 Comments

Come forth into the light of things, let nature be your teacher.  

–William Wordsworth

Last weekend I was off the internet for three and a half days, and I feel ridiculous for even saying that like it’s some big deal, since I have lived two-thirds of my life on Earth without that technology.  (And having lived two-thirds of my life without it, I can honestly proclaim that the internet is a-mazing!)  I didn’t miss it; though along with not having tv, I did have a slight feeling of missing out on what was going on in the world.  But since most of what’s on the news right now gives me a sinking feeling in my stomach, I was better off not knowing.  So what did I do?  I visited with my Mom who came for the weekend.  I cooked food for our Easter celebration.  I laughed with my family around the dinner table.  I read a little bit of the Sunday paper.  And we all went outside to hike, to take pictures, to walk the dog, to bask in the warm sunshine on a wind-cooled day, and to revel in the emerging signs of Spring.

We hiked at our nearby Eagle Park and were disappointed when we saw no movement of gray fluff or adult guardian in the huge eagle’s nest—the second of three years now with no viable eaglets.  We wondered whether it was the age of the parent eagles or if the nearby Sauk River food source was contaminated with something that interfered with the egg development.  (Happily, the other nearby eagle’s nest did have a couple of gray fluffy babies and a watchful parent.)  The bright-light sunshine cast shadows on the tomb-size boulders scattered throughout the park.

A clump of Pasque flowers, also called Easter flower and prairie crocus, bloomed along the trail.

Golden stands of last year’s prairie grasses waved in the wind with hints of green growing up between them.

Nodding heads of Prairie Smoke flower buds hung from early Spring foliage.

We saw the first Bluebird of Spring at Eagle Park, then later delighted that our pair had returned to the yard to check out the houses Chris hastily put up.

Our Spring crocuses were an absolute sight for sore eyes, a shocking display of regal purple, pure white, and purple striped color after a winter of gray, white, and brown.  I couldn’t help but smile and marvel at the sight of them!

Every year, as we come forth into the light of Spring, we are inundated with marvelous, amazing examples of creation, renewal, and transformation.  The old, golden grasses give way to the growing green.  The birds return to their northern breeding grounds and prepare for raising their young.  The miraculous perennials push through the chilly soil for another year of growth and flowering and bearing fruit.  We are just another part of Nature’s transforming miracle.  We are Easter people.  We come together with family and friends.  We prepare nourishing food to share with one another.  We commune around the table with prayer, talk, and laughter.  And then we are drawn outside to commune with Nature, with that from which we come and whom sustains us.  In September of 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed a bill establishing the Assateague Island Seashore National Park with these words, “If future generations are to remember us more with gratitude than sorrow, we must achieve more than just the miracles of technology.  We must also leave them a glimpse of the world as God really made it, not just as it looked when we got through with it.”  Through the miracle of the internet, I commission all of us to become guardians of our little parts of this huge nest called Earth.  Happy Earth Day to us all!

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Spring Tagged With: bald eagles, bluebirds, Eagle Park, earth day, nests, pasque flower, perennials, prairie

Meandering Along the Mississippi River

February 26, 2017 by Denise Brake Leave a Comment

Meandering leads to perfection.  —Laozi, ancient Chinese philosopher

Our Sunday journey began with a distinct purpose and place in mind—to find and explore the Mississippi River County Park.  We had never been to this park, but knew it wouldn’t be too hard to locate, as the Mississippi River runs right through St. Cloud and its northern suburbs.  Once on the right road with the River on our right, we headed north past large houses, an old saw mill dam, and groves of evergreen trees.  Finally, we saw the large sign for the park.  A man with his two small children and two large dogs tumbled from a pick-up truck for some outdoor running and fun in the snow-free prairie area.  A teenage girl drove slowly through the park again and again under the tutelage of her Dad.  The first thing I saw when I disembarked from the car was this huge old cedar tree, pockmarked with rows and rows of woodpecker drills.  What if our every wound was evident on the outside of us, for all the world to see?  Would we be kinder?  Would we take better care of one another?

A patch of white in the gray woods caught my eye.  Zooming in with the camera, I found a monster branch with a cyclops eye, shaggy moss green hair and shelf fungi hands, like gargoyles hanging from a ledge.  I’m still not sure what the white was—it seemed too white for a broken limb on such a dead looking branch, and the warm week of temperatures surely would have melted any snow that high in the tree.  Mystery.

We started down a trail to get to the River but didn’t get very far on the slick, water-coated snow/ice.  We tried another trail, but encountered the same thing—slippery slopes of melting ice with no traction.  The ice-covered River was within sight but out of bounds for today.  We would try another time.

With our plan and purpose foiled, we decided to follow the Great River Road, meandering north to see what we could see.  Prairie Home Companion played on the radio—Chris Thile’s mandolin filling the car and my soul with melodic music.  We saw a bald eagle swoop down to the ditch where its mate and a juvenile were standing.  Beyond them, the River was now open, flowing, with shelves of ice still hanging from the shores.

We drove to Blanchard Dam, one of the tallest dams on the Mississippi River.  It holds back water to create Zebulon Pike Lake (named after explorer Zebulon Pike who was commissioned to find the source of the Mississippi River in 1805.)  Above the dam, the lake was still iced over, despite our warm week, and a lone ice fisherman sat on his bucket patiently waiting for a bite.

We walked out on the old railroad bridge, now the Soo Line Trail, that crosses the river just below the dam.  Huge chunks of ice cascaded and fell from the open gates.  The noise of the water was deafening, and a stiff wind confused our senses even more.

Yet it was kind of exhilarating and marvelous at the same time!

Interesting ice patterns under the bridge by the shore gave way to the mighty Mississippi…

…meandering on its long journey to the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Our attempt to get to the Mississippi River at the county park, as planned, didn’t work.  But sometimes things don’t go as planned.  We run into wounded things and mysterious monsters.  We try to navigate the road ahead and find ourselves on slippery slopes that want to take us down—and I don’t mean down to the River.  Our purpose and intention fail us.  It’s disappointing, to say the least.  My first inclination was to reject the quote by Laozi—how could meandering lead to perfection?!  Purpose, practice, goals, work, intention—those are the qualities that lead to perfection, right?  But then, when I looked more closely at my day, I realized how enjoyable it was to meander along the river.  Listening to Prairie Home Companion with nothing else to do but stare out the window at the River was soothing and satisfying.  The serendipitous sighting of a trio of eagles was a gift.  Standing in the power and beauty of the roaring, unleashed energy of the River was exhilarating.  Meandering along the Mississippi River really was the perfect part of my day.  

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Winter Tagged With: bald eagles, intentions, meandering, Mississippi River

Biking and Hiking Where the Wild Things Are

June 12, 2016 by Denise Brake Leave a Comment

Our copy of Maurice Sendak’s classic picture book ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ is tattered and worn, the shiny gold Caldecott Medal sticker peeling along the circular edge.  I would hate to guess how many times we read it.  The story is about play, actions, feelings, imagination, and processing. (If you are unfamiliar with ‘Where the Wild Things Are,’ click here to see a YouTube reading of the book.)

These wild things in Max’s imagination are at the opposite end of the spectrum to the literally wild things in Nature.  And before I go any further, I must give due respect to the multitude of places across the world that are much more ‘wild’ than here in Central Minnesota.  Nonetheless, all it takes is a bike ride or a hike close to home to encounter the wild things.

We can cross the highway down the hill from our house and ride the twelve-mile bike trail to the west.  Redwing blackbirds sing from their cattail podiums and frogs chortle in the wetland area strewn with Yellow Water Buttercups.

Yellow Water Buttercup

Farther down the trail, the Sauk River flows from the Chain of Lakes where the geese and the pelicans float.  Beware–if you were a fish, he’d eat you up, he loves you so.

Pelican

Down the ditch, across the busy highway, through trees and grass, I saw the strange walking movement of a family of Sandhill Cranes.  These red-masked, five-foot-tall birds with a wingspan of nearly seven feet are formidable defenders of their young ones.  They survey the world all around them for tasty frogs, snakes, insects, small mammals, and grains.  Their distinctive trilling call draws your eyes skyward during spring and fall migration.

Sandhill Cranes

Last weekend we hiked through Rockville County Park to discover we are six baby eagles richer than we were a year ago.  The family of five, with all their yellow eyes and terrible claws, sat peacefully in their lofty nest, watching as we walked around their prairie.

Eagle Family at Eagle Park

Golden Alexander, a member of the carrot family, is a host plant for Black Swallowtail caterpillars.  It has a wild, beautiful scientific name–Zizia aurea–one that is meant to be proclaimed out loud!  ZIZIA AUREA!

Golden Alexander

Be still and look at this beautiful little butterfly on the most common of all wildflowers.

Butterfly on dandelion

The exuberant wildness of Prairie Smoke drifted in the breeze.  The nodding pink-red flowers stand up and open up after pollination and has a seed at the base of each feathery plume.

Prairie Smoke

Prairie Smoke

The other eagle’s nest is on the edge of the forest, and the three young ones sat patiently waiting for their parents to return with supper.

Young eagles at Rockville County Park

As we walked through the forest towards the Sauk River, we saw ferns that grew and grew and grew until they were as tall as we were!

Ferns in Rockville County Park

We saw a woodland plant that looked like Solomon’s Seal, but it had a different flower from the ones that hang from the underside of the arching stems.  When we got home, I looked it up–it’s False Solomon’s Seal–I was both right and wrong.

False Solomon's Seal

 

We all possess the magic trick of staring into our own eyes, letting our imagination run wild, and believing it to be the truth.  We become the king of our own wild imaginations.  We like being in charge of the wild rumpus that ensues.  But like Max, we eventually become lonely, and something from far away entices us to give up being king.  Our ego cries, “Oh please don’t go.”  But we say “No!”  Amid the terrible roars and gnashing of teeth, we step into our true self and sail back to where Someone loves us best of all.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Spring Tagged With: bald eagles, butterflies, Sandhill cranes, wild things, wildflowers, woods

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page »

Connect with us online

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Subscribe to NorthStarNature via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

A Little About Me

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…

Blog Archives

  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014

Looking for something?

Copyright © 2025 · Lifestyle Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in