Fog and stillness at Como Park

Fog in the morning McNelly Conservatory 7917_StaatsThe cold and crisp of winter moderated the past two days with temperatures in the 40’s.  With our layer of snow and cold temperatures on the ground we awoke this morning to a beautiful landscape of fog.  The stillness of early morning and the fog’s softening effect made the landscape magical.  Everything stood quietly as the fog moved in and out, becoming thicker and then lessening to a thin veil.  I was at the McNeely Conservatory at Como Park this morning, where the thin ice of the Frog Pond allowed the fog to form above it in a narrow band, still leaving the dome of the conservatory visible above.

Watching the winter sunset

Watching the sunset at Como_StaatsThe days are short and the nights are long in our Minnesota-part of the hemisphere.  After a stretch of sub-zero days, and the prediction of more to follow, yesterday was a breath of warmer air.  Our highs reached into the 40’s and brought people outside as if it were late springtime.  I was at Como Park to enjoy the late afternoon and watched this couple as they lingered over the early sunset.  The shadows ran long across the snow but their spirits were high as they laughed and encouraged a man who was drilling holes in the ice for fishing.  The sun set quickly, darkness took over, the wind picked up, and as predicted the temperatures fell to subzero overnight.  Our respite was short but gave us the hope of warmer days in the distant future.

A week’s slide into winter

Winter at Como Park_StaatsOur landscape that was brown and cold last week has been transformed into winter.  Daytime temperatures in the single digits, subzero temps at night, and snow have brought the look and feel of winter.  Ponds and lakes that were previously frozen with clear ice are now covered with snow, and are once again being populated with fish houses.  The ducks and geese have all headed south in search of open water.  And we are learning again how to drive in ice and snow.  How quickly this seasonal change has taken place!

Early winter dawn along the Mississippi River

MS River ice and flow_StaatsThe cold of winter has swept south from the Canadian prairie into Minnesota.  The lakes are icing over, but the rivers take a bit longer because of the current.  We were north of the Twin Cities along the banks of the Mississippi River yesterday.  The early morning light cast a beautiful glow on the barren trees along the banks, and the water was flowing but it contained numerous chunks of ice headed southward.  Eventually the river will freeze in some sections, but the sections that remain open will attract birds and wildlife, and will teem with activity throughout the cold winter months.

Frost and ice in the morning

Sunrise over frost & ice 3920_StaatsOur temperatures have been dropping at night causing the sloughs and lakes to begin their ice-over.  It isn’t thick by any means, but it is the start of our shift from fall to winter.  I’ve always enjoyed the reflections of trees and horizons in water, and the change over to ice gives these same reflections a much different look.  The lines are softer and more muted, and until our lakes are snow-covered the reflections can sometimes be almost mirror-like.  On this morning two days ago, the sun was burning through the cold temperatures and the heavy frost causing the landscape to glow in the early light.