Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Winter Blues

Fluffy Crystals Cling to Evergreens
Huskies Romp to the Pond
The House Awaits With Warmth
The Rusty Blur of a Freight Train
Silent Sentinals
Busting Mice
Elmira Pond in Winter Blues
Walking into SuperOne grocery store, the hastily penned sign reads: "Happy Lights on Sale." Chuckling, I ask my husband--who wavers between toddler obnoxiousness and old-man crankiness--if we need to buy him Happy Lights. "No," he grumbles.

In case you're curious, Happy Lights are full-spectrum light bulbs that are meant to infuse the human body with full rays of the missing sun. In the north, the sun can go AWOL (absent without leave) for days, abandoning it's blue-sky post for places I've never been before--like Yuma, Arizona or Khardga, Egypt. People must be giddy, living in such full sun year round.

Some people suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), also known as "winter blues." While I get sleepier, crave more coffee and bake chocolate chip cookies, I'm never sad in winter. I love the snow even with its cover of clouds. It's the blue-sky-arctic-front winter days  I'm happy to have left behind in the Midwest.

My friends in Minnesota have declared the state "colder than Mars." My own "happy light" is just knowing that my valley in northern Idaho is protected by three Rocky Mountain ranges that buffer me from arctic blasts that nail Canada and the nation east and south of me. It's been warmer here than in northern Florida the past few days.

Yet today the sun disappeared. While the rest of the nation shivered, the Pacific Ocean crept over the Cascades and trapped Elmira beneath a gray dome spitting snow that was easily ocean water days ago. Thus the winter-scape on Elmira Pond glows white with fresh fallen snow.

Taking huskies and camera to the far south pasture, I begin snapping white, only to end up with blue photos. The missing sun, domed sky and snow-covered everything creates a blue hue. Snapshots capture pixels of the winter blues that infuse me with joy.

White fluffy crystals of snow gather upon poky needles of evergreen. The camera shows falling snow as fairy-like globes of light floating in air and the landscape deepens into blue. The huskies dash from the pond to the pasture, inspecting every possible mouse hideout in between. A train blasts by, a rusty blur in the blue of snow. The house promises warmth, lights and hot nettle tea while the horse barn stands as silent as the Ponderosa guarding its perimeter. Trucks and cars pass by with chains snow-muffled, driving slow and cautious.

Unchained and infused with winter blues, the huskies and I walk back to the house with snow drops kissing my face the entire way.


10 comments:

  1. i love the photos! very cool. Nice job, beautiful blog.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Dawn! The blue hues were fun to play with!

      Delete
  2. Glorious, said me. I'm still entranced by those ocean drops filling your sky with finely crystallized whale songs, phosphorescent plankton, and a misty spray from waves that previously kissed Hawaiian shores. Now those waves fall like butterfly kisses that gently brush against your face. Aloha, winter's ocean of blue delight.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, said me in return. Awesome--I love that you dove into the Pacific Ocean so deeply. No wonder I feel energized by its moisture! An, I thought I heard a whale song on the wind...

      Delete
  3. Wow, Charli. Your written words 'paint pictures' for me as beautifully as your wonderful photographs, as do the marvelous descriptive words of Renaissance Woman. If I could have a 'wintry wish', it would be to write as creatively as you two do.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My wintery wish is to play with words with you all by the warm fire as the ocean snow falls outside!

      Delete
  4. I would be a bit more giddy if the temps here in north Florida were a bit warmer today and if this dismal rain would go away! Oh well, reading your post warmed the spirit -- no blues, just hibernation!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hibernation is good for you, Ruth! You had colder temps than we did!

      Delete
  5. I happen to love blue, well not the mood, just the color and I think your photos are beautiful! Now, about that cold, after a few days of ice and snow, temps below freezing, frozen pipes, I have decided that perhaps I am not a great snow bunny in-spite of the fact that I do love the look of snow and ice.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Elmira, Idaho has near-perfect snow--it gets cold enough to snow, and it can dump deeply, but not cold enough to freeze pipes or nostrils. Hoping you are warm, looking out at it with working pipes!

      Delete