We were trying to make our way from Point A to Point B this afternoon when, somehow, I missed a turn. We wound up traveling south instead of north — pretty easy to do on unfamiliar roads and under overcast skies — and traveled quite a distance from where we wanted to be. We also didn’t spring for the navigation package for the Honda Insight; I don’t regret that, however. Since we had no schedule there was no pressure so, as we realized the mistake, we simply turned and headed north, carefree. As we drove we began to recognize some names of crossroads and knew that some would take us into the Cuyahoga Valley National Park and toward Peninsula. As we progressed along Bath Road we saw a group of people gathered along the side of the road, several of them crossing the road to stand along a fence; they were all looking at the trees. Oh yes! It’s the Heron rookery! Of course we stopped. I happened to have my little old Canon Digital Rebel XT with me so I shot photos as we watched the Great Blue Herons gliding down to the fields and lofting back up to the trees with twigs and branches. A birder I spoke with said the herons were nesting early this year because of the warmer weather. We were very lucky to happen across the scene and stood and enjoyed the activity for some time before continuing our trip. Sometimes a wrong turn is the best.
northeastern ohio
All posts tagged northeastern ohio
We decided to check out the recently-opened, still-under-development Miller Nature Preserve in Avon, Ohio. Though inside city limits, the preserve consists of 78 acres of wooded land, now set aside as a natural green space. Congratulations to Avon and Lorain County for giving yourselves this great gift! Sitting at the edge of the wooded expanse is a lovely nature center with a 5,000 square-foot conservatory. We had a very relaxing time walking amongst the tropical plants, enjoying their shapes and colors in the late-afternoon February sun. We’ll return this summer to explore trails on the property. Until then, we were very impressed by the great indoors.
The morning was relatively mild and sunny and, out of curiosity, we set off for Medina to see their annual Ice Festival. We arrived fairly early with no vendors open, no demonstrations running. The town square was, however, ringed by ice sculptures. Most of the sculptures were pretty clearly business-oriented, featuring the name and logo of the sponsoring company; well done, but, well, let’s say lacking artistic purity. A minority of sponsors let beautiful creations represent them with only a name tag advertising their names. One massive work, a bench with a huge “winter” face as its back, represented the show itself. Sun back-lit many of our favorites, the clear, frosty, cut, and etched ice showing off its carved detail in shining, wet brilliance — air temperature was just enough above freezing to let the sculptures thaw a bit!
We spent a comfortably cool afternoon strolling around Peninsula, Ohio taking in the winter scenery and visiting our favorite shops. I shot a decent number of winter/snow photos with my little G11, having neglected to bring out the “big guns.” Among the pictures was this one… pruned roses protruding from beneath the snow. Those plants return winter’s sting!
A couple of days can make a tough week! On Wednesday I showed up at the office in the afternoon, expecting to stay an hour or three late to complete a system migration and movement of a large shared file on our staff’s server. I drove home at 4:00 AM Thursday, got maybe 45 minutes of rest after being awake for about 23 hours, then headed back into the office for about another eight hours on the job. While I don’t much like working all night, I was pretty pleased our users saw no interruption in services. Such is the lot of the “IT guy” — if you do your job right and everything works well, you labor in anonymity; if you blow it, everybody knows your name! So I guess I’m strangely pleased nobody knows I did anything. I got a solid six hours of sleep last night and went in today for an easy four hours this morning. As I headed out, I was treated to a glorious sunrise and, though in a hurry to get to work and make a final adjustment to the systems, I felt the need to stop, look, and picture. Welcome to the weekend!
The world around us seemed obsessed with finding “Black Friday” deals. Shoppers camped out at the doors of discount department stores and big electronics retailers around the area and across the country. Shopping mall parking lots were packed with cars. Everywhere a seeming retail feeding frenzy as customers sought amazing savings on items they wanted … most likely not as holiday gifts. In our area the sky became cloudless and intensely blue and the temperatures moderated into the upper-50s (F), an astonishingly beautiful day following on the heels of typical wet and chilly November weather. On our post-Thanksgiving holiday day off, we saw far greater value and sense in visiting the F.A. Seiberling Nature Realm. It was heartening to see many families sharing our appreciation of the beautiful day outdoors, rather than under the roof of a shopping mall. It may have been a big day of shopping for many others but it was no Black Friday here!
“A Day in a Minute” is a time-lapse movie I created for Westlake (Ohio) Porter Public Library as part of the 2011 Ohio Library “Snapshot Day.” It depicts a 12-hour day in the life of the library in about one minute (not including titles). It’s not quite as polished as I’d like but, as a first effort, I’m pretty pleased! (I’d been wanting to try this for a long time now!)
Note: For a much higher quality version of this movie, click here!
Today we enjoyed one of the finest days autumn has had to offer. Mild temperatures (for fall) in the 50s or low 60s (F), gorgeous blue skies, warming sunshine, and the last of the fall colors. After a leisurely start to the day we headed out to Garrettsville for lunch and a visit to the Shaker Tree shop. Shaker Tree, last weekend, was a feast of home decor items on a Halloween and autumn theme. During the week, however, the store was transformed to Christmas! To understand the magnitude of the work involved in the transformation, one would need to visit the shop and see the many hundreds (maybe more) of individual items on the floor, tables, shelves, and walls. Nearly all of the previous season’s unsold stock had to be wrapped, padded, boxed, and stored. A similar number of winter and holiday season items needed to be brought in, unboxed, unpadded, unwrapped, and put on display. The work was all done in the space of a few days and by a very small staff, folks that were present (bleary-eyed and exhausted) to open the store today. She Who Must Be Obeyed enjoyed a good shop but successfully resisted temptation (today) to purchase anything but a lovely glass ornament. I picked out a nice bag of caramel corn.
With the weather too good to waste being indoors, we drove a short distance to Nelson’s Ledges State Park. The place is known for its dramatic, tumbled outcroppings of conglomerate rock covered in algae, mosses, ferns, and with trees clinging on to shallow pockets of earth or the very face of the exposed rock. The sedimentary layers are often, maybe usually, tilted and the rocks have split and separated forming canyons, passages, and caves. It’s a very dramatic site in the middle of rolling farmland. I had brought along my camera and was having a hard time choosing what to shoot next, seeming to stop more than walk. The idea was, after all, to walk a bit. I think. As we haltingly hiked along the trail at the eastern edge of the ledges, we ran into areas where water was running down from the rocks and into woodland soil. At first it was no real problem. Then we encountered boggy areas.
We stopped when we reached a spot where we saw no trail blazes but saw plenty of wet and mud. Rather than re-trace our path and cross a couple of mucky areas, we went downhill and sought an easy way to get on the paved road and walk back to the parking lot. The roadside ditch had steep banks and water in the trench so we walked parallel to the road seeking a shallow spot. I was lower on the slope, scouting, and She was a bit higher. I called out I had encountered a little mud and stopped for a moment. She kept moving and soon found herself stepping deeper, then stumbling into dark, black, stinking muck that had been covered by innocent-looking dry leaves! Her left foot must have sunk a foot deep before she escaped the mire! There was little I could do but try and scramble up the hill, through the brush, and grab her hand to keep her upright and haul her out. Nope, it didn’t even seem funny at the time, and that’s a good thing… I didn’t need to hold back laughter to preserve domestic tranquility! Eventually we found a place where we could cross the ditch and stroll to our car on smooth, dry asphalt.
Looking back, it was a fine day out enjoying sunshine, lovely sights, fresh air, no injuries, and a wee adventure.
A foggy morning made for beautifully moody scenes at Hinckley Lake. The first scene of many that caught my eye was of two empty picnic tables resting amongst autumn leaves on the shore overlooking the lake. I strolled along the path gathering images as I went: ghostly lines of trees seen through the mists; lovely groves of trees with soft light infused from above. Though engrossed in the lovely views of muted color and shadowy trees along the shore, a spot of color trailside caught my eye: Two clumps of fungi were growing at the base of an oak, both dripping with heavy dew. Slimy, perhaps, but their glistening beauty kept my attention for some time. The morning’s quiet beauty made for a welcome respite.












