Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Winter

After returning from the Upper Peninsula, as I mentioned in my yearly post, I jumped into speed writing my thesis before defending right before Christmas, then final thesis revisions were due in January. In between all that, I generally carried on as usual with life in Ann Arbor. It wasn’t a particularly cold or snowy winter, so I got outside when I could, including biking through the winter months. Right after Thanksgiving, I got my telephoto zoom lens, so I also spent time crawling through the undergrowth looking for squirrels and birds.

Squirrel

Early in December, I paid a visit to the arboretum to try out my telephoto lens. Around that same time, the public golf courses run by Ann Arbor Parks and Rec open up to walkers/dog walkers/etc. by inverse rule – from March to November, non-golfers are explicitly not allowed to be on the golf course, but if it’s not March to November, they’re not not allowed. I’ve mostly been walking in the same circles for the past two and a half years, so the golf course is a nice variation and it gives the golf course purpose in the winter.

Golf course cloud at sunset

I also continued on my other usual paths. The ornaments were out again this year in one of the parks I frequent, and I found some new additions. The week before Christmas, Ann Arbor got freezing rain, and I made a loop around my neighborhood to get photos. Between Christmas and New Year’s, a coworker and I made a trip to the botanical garden when the weather was too nice to stay inside. The indoor conservatory had reopened by then, and had a couple Christmas trees plus an “art” exhibit where they put frames around some of their plants to highlight different design principles used in art like color, space, texture, etc.

Some sort of Christmas rodent

Christmas tree at the botanical garden conservatory

With my bike in action and a telephoto lens in hand, I headed to the Huron River a couple times in January because from prior years I knew that a lot of ducks/geese/swans gather along the shores of the Huron during winter. It was mostly mallards and Canada geese, but also some trumpeter swans and once I saw a pair of hooded mergansers. With the weather holding through January, I biked my new telephoto lens out to the Barton Nature Area as well, but arrived in time for the sun to be setting directly over the river, so didn’t get a whole lot with it.

Barton Dam

February finally stayed cold enough any snow we got to stick around for a while. One day, we were getting a good amount of soft, fluffy snow, the kind that sticks to branches if there’s not too much wind, so after work I headed out with my camera. Mid-February, there was one warm day that I took my bike out on the Border to Border trail. The B2B, at least the sections that go through the major parks, does get snow removal services during the winter, so that was clear. Once I got to the Parker Mill Park section, it was slushy, but passable with my all-purpose Target children’s bicycle. Then I got a look at the Matthaei Botanical Gardens Trail, and somewhere in the back of my mind I think I did remember it falls into the university’s “no winter maintenance” category. The MBGT was essentially melted water over hard packed snow/ice, in other words, very slippery. At that point I decided it was not a good day to die, so I turned back there.

Snow on trees

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