I stare out my window towards the south and see a rocky
ridge shrouded in fog. It’s cold for this southerner, maybe 28 degrees, with a
layer of last night’s freezing rain on the ground. The sun hasn’t been heard
from in days. By lunchtime I have a pretty bad case of cabin fever and refuse
to be confined by the weather any longer. Living among the bustle of town, what
more was there to do but buck up and head across the road to this mountain for
a hike? The mountain, confined by progress to the north and near Ozark,
hillbilly wilderness to the south, has provided me much inspiration in the
past. It stands as a summer stronghold for sugar maples and Scarlet Tanagers.
Today, the maples are dormant to all but sapsuckers, and tanagers are long
gone. Today, the mountain belongs solely to January.
Expecting solitude on this day when most of society rests
indoors, I’m not disappointed. Nary a soul was seen as I climbed the trail
through a miraculous passage of striated sandstone, up and up to the top where the
fog was thickest. Robert Frost would’ve beamed with pride at my adventure down
the “road less traveled”. Leaves were frozen to the forest floor, clambering
across rocks and mud proved dangerous thanks to a film of ice, and many trees
provided a slippery hold being iced themselves. Yet in spite of it all, life
was everywhere. The freeze brought out brilliant greens on mossy rocks and
trees. A cranky chipmunk was munching an acorn on one of these rocks; a lively
part of this mountain life. He seemed to tell me to look around instead of down
and when I did I realized the forest teemed with birds. So many birds made me
reminisce of times in a tropical forest (partly wishing for that warmth).
Cedar Waxwing among greenbrier. |
Butterbutt (Yellow-rumped Warbler) in the snow. |
Later, watching a White-breasted Nuthatch climb up, down, and sideways on a tree I asked the same question. Nuthatches, however, have stubby tails that can’t reach the tree trunk. They can also move in any direction on a tree, whereas creepers and woodpeckers can pretty much only travel up it. In lieu of having long, stiff tail feathers, nuthatches offset their legs, one below the other, acting as their “prop”. Take a look next time you see a nuthatch hanging on tight and you’ll find this to be true!
As I reached the ridge’s spine, I came to a shale barren,
dotted with post oaks that have seen this world at its worst and at its best.
It was on one of the downed ancients that I sat to catch my breath after the
final jaunt to the top. The fog was thicker here than it had been down below,
there was no wind, and all was silent. Refreshing, but a little eerie. I stood
to turn back and was startled by the outburst of a Carolina Wren, invisible
through the fog. Wondering whether or not it was me who caused the sounding of
the alarm, my heart jumped as two deer darted from the fog and down the ridge.
With an extra spring in my step, I trekked back down the mountain, past where
all the birds had been an hour before, and out through the striated sandstone
walls. Exiting, I was bid farewell by more waxwings and my first Purple Finches
of the year, all hanging tight to branches as they wheeled around snagging
berries. Moving slowly, I managed to slip past without flushing them, though
I’m sure they were always watching.
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