One of the things I like best about living in a climate with rapid seasonal variations is the constant “use it or lose it” lessons in appreciation. Everything changes so fast here that I can only “see these beauties” or “do those activities” at specific times of year, some as brief as a week. Miss it? Wait a year! So, we have no “mañana, mañana” attitude. This fact contributes a celebratory immediacy to waking up every single day. Below are seasonal notes for our home, at Latitude 61, in Southcentral Alaska.
WINTER:
Temperatures: Normal: -20 F - +20 F, November - March
Transportation: Ski plane and snowmachines, snowshoes, cross country skis, bunny boots
Beauty: A silent, black and white world
Favorite images: heavy snow coating tree branches and buildings; lacy ice halos on birch canopies; the aurora borealis, our log cabin puffing birch smoke from the chimney.
Animals: Audible/ visible owls, eagles, and ravens, and coyotes. We see tracks of quieter animals in the woods, like martins, hares, foxes. Once a lynx (I think).
Favorite activities:
Outdoors: Snowshod and booted walks, cross country skiing, snowmachine treks through the pretty woods and across frozen lakes and bogs, tracking animals, seeing dog mushers and moose, ice fishing picnics, grooming trails, beautiful regional flights.
Indoors: no urgency to leave during three day snowstorms or deep cold and dark; starting seeds on every window ledge as I plan the gardens, on-line classes and book immersion.
WINTER:
View across the lake in winter |
Temperatures: Normal: -20 F - +20 F, November - March
Transportation: Ski plane and snowmachines, snowshoes, cross country skis, bunny boots
Beauty: A silent, black and white world
Favorite images: heavy snow coating tree branches and buildings; lacy ice halos on birch canopies; the aurora borealis, our log cabin puffing birch smoke from the chimney.
Animals: Audible/ visible owls, eagles, and ravens, and coyotes. We see tracks of quieter animals in the woods, like martins, hares, foxes. Once a lynx (I think).
Favorite activities:
Outdoors: Snowshod and booted walks, cross country skiing, snowmachine treks through the pretty woods and across frozen lakes and bogs, tracking animals, seeing dog mushers and moose, ice fishing picnics, grooming trails, beautiful regional flights.
Indoors: no urgency to leave during three day snowstorms or deep cold and dark; starting seeds on every window ledge as I plan the gardens, on-line classes and book immersion.