A new year with a look back to 2014

12 photos of 2014_StaatsI was reading another photographer’s blog and she had posted her 12 favorite photos of the past year.  With a nod to Kim Manley Ort, I culled through 4,142 images to pick 12 photos that were my favorites.  Some have personal meanings, like the family photo after my mother’s death or the Royal typewriter that has been passed down through my father’s family.  Others transport me to a cold winter morning (much like today!) or an unusually emerald-green lake with a sandy beach in north central Minnesota.  The year took twists and turns that weren’t expected, yet I’m learning to embrace the changes, meet the challenges, and appreciate each day that is given – with joy and wonder.  May the coming year be filled with 365 such days!

Green of spring

FernsAs quickly as winter left, spring has arrived.  Minnesota spring-time is short and condensed.  It’s almost as if you can watch the flowers come up through the thawed and warming ground.  Our lilacs are bursting forth, the peonies grow inches overnight, and the greenest of ferns have started to unfurl.  From a tight bud to the gentle arches, they are a study of delicateness and beauty.  Soon the fronds will be straight and upright, but I love the soft curves that they now show.

Magnolia time again

Magnolia 1436.StaatsOur spring has blossomed once again.  Even amidst the cooler temperatures and late season, the magnolias have flourished and bloomed.  Their bright white is a wonderful precursor to the later vibrant colors of the tulips and annuals that will follow.  Although they bloom for such a short period of time, they seem to be the early messenger announcing the change of seasons.

Minnesota fishing opener weekend

Sunset over Inguadona Lake_StaatsThis weekend has been the Minnesota fishing opener – a tradition of celebrating the beginning of open lakes and water, the promise of spring and summer, and the outdoor recreation of fishing.  This is the weekend for the opening of walleye and Northern pike fishing – a time that finds all fisher-people out on the water.  We have participated in this ritual for the past few years, heading north to some of our favorite lakes.  This weekend we camped near Inguadona Lake and we were fortunate to be rewarded with a wonderful sunset.  Although the day had been sunny and windy, with clouds around, the evening calmed and the sun broke through the clouds before setting.  The reflection over the lake seemed fitting for the close of the day.  As we later slipped into our tent, we drifted off to sleep with the sound of loons calling across the lake.  All in all, a true Minnesota celebration of the fishing tradition and the North Woods and Lake Country.

Pasque flowers

Pasque flowers_Staats As winter lets go of its grip,  pasque flowers are one of the first wildflowers to bloom.  They’re diminutive and small, perhaps only 5 inches tall, and they generally thrive in gravel prairie areas.  In Minnesota these prairie areas are not common, however there is a glacial outwash area near the Cannon River south of the Twin Cities that has the perfect conditions for these harbingers of spring.  I ventured down last week at late afternoon and was thrilled to find them in peak bloom.  Their delicacy was made more evident by the backlighting that occurred as the sun was starting to set in the west.  Their brilliance is my cue that winter will not last forever, and the flowers that grace our area, even for a very short period of time, are worth celebrating and appreciating.