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Winter Cusp

mountain

mountainDuring this cusp of winter, rain forest natives offer hope of spring. Blue berry brush blush to an almost purple shade of red as their leaf buds swell and crack open. The willow branches turn orange before leafing out. Even the canopies of red alder trees show color. This morning, as sunshine burns the fog out of the Gold Creek Valley, only the balsam poplar still wear winter colors. They stand with their gray and black bones exposed, as they have since stripped of yellow leaves last fall.

mountains

The poplar bones emergence from fog is the most beautiful seen so far today. When we left home, the gray still closed off Chicken Ridge but we could see blue sky breaking out above Douglas Island. Something animated the fog. Discrete patches climbed between the spruce trees on Mt. Roberts while a cylinder of grey hovered on the edge of the Franklin Street stairs. Now I wonder if animation is the last step before dissipation in the life of fog.

eagle

We climb above the creek on a path that offers views of mountains over the stoic poplars. Mr. Roberts and its buddies, freshly dusted by last night’s snows, muscle their way out of the dying cloud clover. With eyes trained by a week of rain and cloud diminished light, the mountains look too rich, like the window display of a Swedish konditori. Bald eagles add to the opulence of scene. Several sun themselves in trailside poplar trees. We drop back to the creek and find four more around something emerging from the snow. Jumpy, they fly into separate poplars to wait for us to leave.

eagles

I cheer on blueberries and that the other Southeast plants that have already committed to spring. But I respect the poplars’ reticence. They teach patience and hope. The trees will wait with knurled limbs exposed until the northern tilt of the earth banishes frost. Then, during the first warm days of summer they become natural censers. Their leaf buds will swell and burst to perfume Downtown Juneau with balsam incense.

Tell me it is spring

causewayWe stand on the causeway edge, two guys in sensible rain gear, not caring how clumsy we look compared to the sleek scoters and ducks that float just offshore.

“You been out to Shaman Island today?”

“No, I come down here on a good low tide, work over to the point and back before the tides floods in. Use to have coffee with Mr. ______ when he had a cabin over there.”

He bends down to pet Aki, sliding his other hand down the walking stick he had just carved from alder wood. When he rights himself, I can see that salt spray had reddened the whites of his eyes.

“It was low tide at 8:30 so she will be smoking in now to cover this (pointing to the causeway) soon.”

The rock and sand path to Shaman Island looks to be a good three feet out of the water so I decided to sneak over and back before the tide covers it.

scotersThe wind sweeps across the causeway, holding Aki’s windward earflap straight up in the air. Every few steps she stops and shakes her head to return the flap to its proper place. The wind and Aki continue the battle until we reach Shaman Island where a single American Robin feeds on a patch of green grass. We have seen and heard other proofs of spring on the walk like varied thrust song and swollen buds on the blue berry brush. But this robin, if it sang, could make me believe the calendar and its assertion that winter is over. It stays silent.

closing

In minutes we need to start back across the causeway. As predicted, the tide is smoking in. Small fingers of water pulse and retreat beneath our feet as we cross over to safety. When we reach higher ground I hear eagle complaints and see two mature bald eagles, white heads and tails book ending chestnut bodies, glide together and apart, together and apart, like flirts dancing in the wind. If he had not left, the man with red-rimmed eye might have told me that bald eagles mate for life and that these a the mating mood.

eagles

Mellowing Fog

glacierThanks to the fog, Aki and I are alone on the Nugget Falls trail. One couple passed us when we were still near the visitor’s center, disappeared into the grey, reappeared and then melted away as they returned to the parking lot. Aki doesn’t enjoy the solitude brought by the thick blanket. She hunts for other people and dogs, sometimes roaming farther away than normal. But I have an advantage over the little dog. I can imagine the glacier and Mendenhall Towers that rise above the ice. We both can hear the falls but my mind sees its braided courses plunge into the lake. It can also see mountain goats, white fur tinged yellow, feeding above the falls. This requires more faith, given the fickleness of wild animals.

Goat

When the fog lift I can see the glacier’s foot, the falls, and three pure white dots that my telephone lens transforms into mountain goats. An adult and kid feed without consideration of the little dog or I. The other adult looks down on us before he too feeds. They know neither dog nor man can climb their steep hillside.

baby

Recently, someone had a picnic dinner at the base of the falls and left the Styrofoam tray that once held his pork tenderloins. I know his initials, W.C., because he also dropped his Alaska Airlines boarding pass for a flight from Seattle. On a sunny day I might get angry while carrying W.C.’s garbage back to the visitor’s center trash can and imagine him as a littering yob who eats unhealthy food in the presence of goat and glacier. But walking through country made indistinct by low clouds, it is easier on my heart to assume that wind had ripped away W.C.’s trash.Aki

The power of curves

scootersWhile looking over the photos that I took this morning on the False Outer Point trail, I ask Aki what it is about a curving line that draws attention. Every one of my trail shots curls into the forest. I framed each picture of the Chilkat Range with a “c” shaped raft of surf scoters in the foreground.

boardwalkIs it the question they raise as they curl into the horizon? Aki looks at me like she would any other fool. But I persist and ask about the boardwalk photo. It features an elevated plank trail snaking in a compound curve above new ice. Since we don’t have snakes in Alaska, Aki has no reference point and refuses to answer. To placate the little poodle mix, I promise to include a picture she will like—of her looking fierce on a snow-covered beach.Aki

Aki’s Ghosts

ghostsIf, on this Ides of March, I lacked faith and sought it, I might deify the two mountains that suddenly appear above the Gold Creek valley. Below all is dark, lit only by translucent ice and fresh snow—a place to plod in the gray. Above, two sun brightened peaks float in a thinning snow squall. My camera can’t capture them, which adds to their divine resume. Maybe I’ll consider them ghosts. Aki must think them to be from another plane. She growls and dances like when she wants us to move away from perceived danger. She calms when the squall thickens to vanish her enemies

ice

Out of the Storm

blue skyToday’s forecast calls for snow and thunder. We drive through thick snow squalls to the Sheep Creek delta. Walls of light gray hide most of the channel and all of the Douglas Island mountains. There is no thunder. We have crows and mallards to watch as they feed on ground just revealed by the ebbing tide. They hunker in defensive, even grouchy postures.

crowA foghorn sounding near Lucky Me does not move the birds. In minutes, the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Spar, a buoy tender stationed in Kodiak slips out of a diminishing snow squall.

cutter

When I walk toward the channel for a better photo opportunity of the cutter, a small raft of mallards lift off the channel in unison like a precision wing of harrier jets.

ducks

Wild Armistices

seaside 2I found little silence in California, even on early morning bike rides. Cars and trucks could always be hear over sea lion barks, gull shrieks, and the more soothing mutter made by waves collapsing on Monterey Bay beaches. But it is a place where the stars of nature seem to have negotiated peace with the tourist trade. We biked out 17 Mile Drive along the edge of a famous golf course to Bird Rock. After maneuvering around tourist buses decorated with kanji and slim Asian women trying to capture airborne pelicans in their selfies, we stopped to watch the animals and birds crowd onto the offshore rock. For two quarters we used a high-powered telescope to spy on jostling sea lions and cormorants drying their wings. In closer kelp beds sea otters floated on their backs. Before returning our rental bikes, we watched harbor seals in Monterey Harbor relax, motionless on rocks like plump politicians in steam bath.

sealionsDuring a Seattle flight delay on return to the rain forest, we walked through the Chihuly Glass in the Garden exhibit at Seattle Center. I enjoyed the manufactured beauty— glass shaped into pleasing shapes with colors only found on tropical fish. The music of a street musician’s flute mixed with the spring smell of hyacinth bloom. Bird sound couldn’t be heard. The last wild flower had been rooted out by the gardener.

glass

After surviving heavy turbulence on the descent into Ketchikan, Flight 69 bounced me into Juneau last night. This morning, Aki and I wander the meadows around a favorite salt chuck. While Aki springs through the thin snow cover I spot four river otters hauled up on slough ice. Since she has bad eyesight and we are downwind of the otters, the little dog will never know they were there. I have no problem leading her into the forest were we make a wide detour around them.

ottersAfter, we walk through clouds of small birds (chickadees, wrens, red poles, kinglets) all singing their work songs. Other than flying from the ground we occupy, the birds give little reaction to our presence. Do we, the otters, birds, dog, and I, live under the sort of armistice reached by animal and man in California? I just know that today we tolerate each other. Aki acted out of ignorance with the otters, but the others, like the people and animals in California have knowledge.saga

Walking Home from Treadwell

Sandy Beach

From the apex of the Gastineau Channel Bridge, I can see where we started this walk in Treadwell and Chicken Ridge, where we will end. Aki, who showed nonchalance during the walk from Douglas town along a busy highway, wants off this bridge. She hugs the concrete divider that separates pedestrians from vehicle traffic because it is as far as she can get from the bridge edge. She must share my discomfort at walking along the edge of empty space.

harbor

Low clouds and fog diminish the view. They may burn off like yesterday. I want to stop here on the high point of the bridge and wait for the sun to power through but Aki needs to push on so we do—off the bridge, through the almost vacant flats, then up the steep angles of Goldbelt to home.

crpws

Nothing Makes Sense

golub

Deep in what the calendar names winter, I walk without grippers on a trail normally treacherous with ice. (New England, please return our snow). Aki digs and sniffs along the trail’s edges where spring like conditions have released odors recently hidden under snow. We will never walk in the sun today but it shoots its rays on the wheat colored meadow across the river and along the entire Chilkat Mountain Range to the west. The trail leads to one of Juneau’s few sandy beaches where today gulls feed in the shallows, sometimes crossing over the white reflection of a beautiful mountain with the ugly name of Mt. Golub. Anywhere in the lower 48, people would brag about having the pyramid shaped peak in their backyard. Here, only the climbers mention it.

beach

On the large tidal meadow we cross after turning away from Mr. Golub, I almost step in bear scat: pale grey stuff shot through with pieces of dried grass. Somebody must be up and about to see if it really is spring. Later we find a collection of frozen sundews, open jaws filled with snow melt. Still later, three feet up a trailside spruce a red squirrel appears to wait for Aki. My little dog ignores the squirrel until it chatters a challenge. When Aki dashes over the squirrel climbs onto the stub of a branch and just stares us down. Nothing today, is as it should be.

squirrel

Aki’s Ghost

gullsI don’t like it when Aki barks during beach walks. Looking over my shoulder I can’t spot the object that has set her off this time. There is a large metal drainpipe mangled by strong tides. Sometimes the little dog barks at such dark shapes. Sometimes she just barks, as if telling a loitering ghost to move on to heaven or hell. Her alarm apparently doesn’t bother the mallard ducks and glaucous-winged gulls that float just shore. Maybe they see Aki’s ghost. It ticks me off since I am trying to sneak up on what look like crows down the beach. They turn out to the remnants of pilings for a wharf that once serviced the AJ Mine.Aki and JF

Down channel the towns of Juneau and Douglas disappear under white, rain-charged clouds but we are in the dry. We are also alone except for the birds. It is two hours short of a 19.1 foot high tide. Already the flood lifts mallard ducks, lesser scaups, and the gulls off their shrinking sand bars lunch counters. Eventually, it will cover the beach and wash away all traces of our passage over the sand. Maybe it will carry away the large lion mane jellyfish that Aki stopped to sniff. In eight more hours we could return to hunt for other things deposited by the retreating tide.down channel