Monthly Archives: February 2013
Challenging the Challenge
Sunny Winter Day
It is a perfect winter day here in Ontario! The temperature hovers around 0 degrees, the sun is shining. The snow is covering the ground – white and fresh. It is the sort of day that nature calls you to go outside and enjoy it. The perfect day for a long walk on snowshoes through a Carolinian forest!
Sadly… my snowshoes are at THO and I am in Hamilton. It just isn’t the same in the city, is it? The sidewalks are all sloppy and gross. The cars going by splash you as they pass. Even so, I think I will pull on my most waterproof pair of boots and venture out with the canine pack.
Have a nice day all.
Tipping the Scales
I am back in Hamilton just in time to miss a great opportunity to snow-shoe at THO. Even so, the birds here in Hamilton are happy to have me back. My feeders are covered in snow that is at least a foot and a half deep now and showing no sign of stopping. After the drive and walkways were shovelled, I cleared off a spot on top of the patio chair and the air-conditioner and dumped a bunch of seed and peanuts there. I am unsure if you can see just how many birds there are here, sheltering themselves in the cedars in between turns, but I am guessing there are about 50-60 of them.
The drought last summer makes food so scarce this winter, so I am tipping the scales for these little creatures just a little bit. There are lots of varieties of sparrows, dark eyed Juncos, starlings, purple grosbeaks a cardinal pair who depend on my feeders.
They pay me back by sharing their beauty with my eyes and mind and of course by singing. They always remind me of my great love, Townes Van Zandt. Specifically Townes haunting voice and lyrics, “the birds were talking all at once” come to me… and so I sing too, along with the little chatterers, in my off key and not so wonderful way.
Thankfully my dogs don’t mind much.
Plenty of Light
Most of my readers will know that I installed a solar panel this summer and ran wires and lights too. When I did so a few of you cautioned that the 12 volt system would not meet my needs. So far, not much has changed, every time I turn on the switch there is a ray of clear, free light that pops on.
The only let down I had, is that I can’t charge my drill. This remains the only drawback of going with a small 12 volt system in my particular off grid situation.
The stand that I built for it seems to be working really well too. It keeps the panel off the ground and it is also heavy enough to stay on the ground even with the huge winter winds that we experience here on the escarpment.
Pretty reflection isn’t it?





