Showing posts with label fog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fog. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 2017

Searching for color in the winter woods

Yesterday morning I drove into Mt. Pleasant to spend a little bit of time wandering through the swamps at Mission Creek Woodland Park.  While I enjoy swamps any time of year, winter is the easiest time to travel through them in mid-Michigan.  Much of the surface water in the swamp is frozen this time of year and if you tread carefully you can walk across places where you would normally be in mud up to your knees.  I will admit to a few ill-advised steps that broke through thin ice and a few more that were made in areas with no ice present.  Mud... it happens.

Any time spent outdoors is good time.

Most of the time a walk through the woods in winter is about seeing the small details.

Leaves and stems melting through ice left by a recent storm

Fog droplets on a young American Beech tree

Color can be hard to find.  Sometimes it is subtle...

Turkey Tail fungus on a stump

Sometimes it is jarring when seen against all the drabs colors of the snow and sky.

Moss on a fallen log





Did you notice spider webs on the moss in the picture above?  There were hundred of webs strewn everywhere throughout the swamp.  A closer look revealed the architects...



The brightest color to be found throughout the swamp was the green of sedge tussocks.  Some of the tussocks were surrounded by open water (and last year's leaves); other tussocks were surrounded by ice and snow.

Sedge tussock and Red Oak leaves

Sedge tussocks surrounded by ice

The recent spate of warm weather has caused much of the snow and ice to melt away.  The trees both slow it down by blocking some of the rays of the sun, and speed it up by warming at the base because of the sun.


Snow melts quickly at the base of trees


Some meltwater is pooling in low areas, filling what will become seasonal ponds later in the year.  Other water is flowing away to lower areas.  As the water flows it cuts down through the ice.

Water flowing over the ice

A channel curves around tussocks and through the ice

Eventually, much of the water will flow either over the ground or through the soil to Mission Creek and from there to the Chippewa River.

Mission Creek

Someday this curve of the creek will cut completely through that bank and create an oxbow

Some of the my favorite finds of the day were the smallest.  Many of the trees in the swamp are covered with various types of lichens.  Some are easy to see from the ground.  Others are found higher in the trees.  When a tree falls, it brings those lichens down to a level where they are easy to see.








My favorite image of the day though was taken as I left the park.  Both sides of Crawford Road (also known as Harris St.) are lined with woods that arch over the roadway.  Even on sunny days this section of road is dark.  Yesterday, the warm temperatures and melting snows caused dense fog throughout the area.  It creates a really cool moody feeling to any woodland scene.

Crawford Road (Harris Street) near Mission Creek Park


Friday, January 15, 2016

Sublimation and Advection

This morning much of Mid-Michigan was covered with fog.  The fog was caused by warm air moving over the snow covered ground.  The warm air causes moisture some of the snow to turn directly into a vapor (skipping the liquid stage).  This process is know as sublimation.  When the air is completely saturated, meaning it can hold no more vapor, the water begins to condense or turn into liquid droplets (fog).  This type of fog is known as advection fog.


Friday, February 13, 2015

More Nature Photographs from April 2005 - March 2006

I love my job.  I get to teach kids (and adults) about the beautiful and ugly natural wonders in their own neighborhood - even the ugly things are beautiful in their own way.  I hope that the students I teach will grow to love the plants, animals, fungi, rocks, trees, etc. as much as I do.

I get to share photographs that I have taken of the wonderful world around me - kids are often amazed when they find out that most of the photos that I use during presentations are ones that I took.  They are even more amazed when they learn that the photos were taken in the county or even town that they live in.

I take thousands of photographs each year, students see only a few of them.  Sometimes the time I wish I could be out taking photos is instead the time I spend in the classroom sharing photos.  I need a few more hours in the day.

I thought I would share a few more photos from my first year seriously thinking about photography.  I got a Canon film SLR camera (with two zoom lenses) in April 2005.  I have previously shared ten photos from that first year in this post from November 2013.  Here are a dozen more.  These photos were all taken on film and then scanned.





  









Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Fog

A foggy late summer morning on the Chippewa River in 2008
 
This morning the drive to work was through a very foggy landscape reminding me of the Carl Sandberg poem "Fog".
 

 
The fog comes
on little cat feet.
 
It sits looking
over harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Just wait a few minutes...

Mark Twain has famously been quoted as saying "If you don't like the weather in New England, just wait a few minutes." 

This phrase has been adapted to just about every region of the country. 

Will Rogers adapted it for his home state; "If you don't like the weather in Oklahoma, wait a minute and it'll change."

The phrase applies to the weather in Mid-Michigan too.  Especially in the Spring

Yesterday, snow.

Last night, rain.

Today, fog.


Two small trees in the fog



Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Snow, Ice, Fog, & Rain

The title of this post sums up the local weather for the past 24 hours.  For the first time in weeks I had a couple of hours to get away from the office to explore one of the local parks and take some photographs.  All photos are from Mill Pond Park in Mt. Pleasant.

Marsh and wet meadow

Doe and fawn in the marsh

Waving the white flag

Pond edge

Common Cattail

Marsh overview

Fox Squirrel

Silver Maple leaves and buckthorn fruit

Fox Squirrel eating maple seeds

Grape tendrils grasping leaf stem

Weir on the Chippewa River

Stream through a marsh

Rose hips

Reflections on the Chippewa River