Thursday, June 18, 2026

Superior Spring, in Retrospect


Captured on large format transparency film, mostly.



Occasional appearances to the contrary, the Superior Basin is a naturally hard place.



Typically, Northwoods winter is “kinda long.”



As the frigid season finally starts to give way, anticipation grows.



Snowmelt saturates the Basin. Often in a mad rush.



Yet for a brief time, spring seems almost picture postcard perfect.



Inevitably, all that wet splendor also births a plethora of biting bugs.

For instance, hiking sweat stained and heavy laden along the ballistic buzzing mile or so of wilderness river trail hoping maybe to catch a rumored seasonable waterfall was a real trial.

Except there I learned that for just a very few days, marsh marigolds might actually thrive on near vertical hard rock, when kept sufficiently wet.

Upper left, for those wishing to see…



It once took me three  springs in a row on what was for me sacred ground, to capture merely a single worthy image of a very special place.



First year, marauding clouds of mosquitos surrounded me and I hightailed it out before I even got in.



Second year I managed to about set up then instead fled lickity split, though I sure the hell thought that like any good Boy Scout, I’d gone in prepared.



Third year proved the charm. Credit perseverance and pro grade anti-biting bug field gear.

And I've never been back here again, not in spring...



Few weeks later give or take, even marauding insects are relatively sated.



Summer arrives as the shaded forest is flush. Which rich green season around Superior runs fleeting.



Because with summer solstice, ever shorter days are each and every day, while long light lowering steadily toward another hard winter is the one true season.



Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Shining Light on the Prairie - Spring into Summer

 


As the flood receded, the land thrived.



Exploded, even.



Of course, not everything survived.



What couldn’t now feeds what does.



After the flood, the year quick reverted back to dry.



Only once since, has it rained worth a damn.



Yet whether on seasonably soft mornings,



temperate middays



or late day shade...



wild life did its wonderous thing particularly wondrously, this spring.



Suddenly it’s summer.



Meteorological not astrological variety, to be sure.



Just the same.



Truth is, the thorny real world is fierce resolute.



And these days even this far north, boasts all manner of green.



Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Flood


Third week in April, rainy days persist.



Then one deep dark night, the deluge came.

After that it's Katy bar the door as regards anything like 'normal'.



A landscape that hadn’t seen this much rain in so short a time since who knows when positively overflowed.



Fleeing for their lives against rampaging current not of their making, riverine residents find refuge upon placid waters hidden deep in what's normally dry forest. Where by rights, they simply oughtn't be.

Their real world, unbound.



Terrestrial denizens struggle to make due.



This duck raises her brood in an exposed shallow pool left on otherwise flat prairie soon enough to be muck, infested with biting bugs.



One might even say the regular order of things had been overturned.



Except of course, that’s nowhere near true.



Instead, it’s reinvigorated.



For certain, not everything survived. But that's simply the way of things.



With May, persistent rain ended and spring occasionally shone bright.



The waters receded.



And when walking the green landscape of my youth…



…what’d been laid low by more than a century of abuse and callous neglect was risen into a new semblance of what it’s meant to be.



And for the 1st time in civilized memory,



I beheld an entirely reasonable approximation



of the original



forest primeval.



Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Rainy Days



This past winter held fast to chronic dryness. Year’s long trend now. Lengthy enough to reflect a new normal.

Whatever the hell that may be.



Then it rained through much of March. Whole buckets full. Regularly, in downpours.

Previously parched, the happily wooded landscape sucked it right up.



Come second week of April, things were downright soggy.



The forest responded with appropriate glee.



Local rivers and creeks stood at bank full or just beyond. Wetlands did their job.



In my boyhood woods, all that water runs downhill.



Up top, nascent spring thrived.



Down below, vernal pools overflowed.



Bottomland held the excess.



This spring in these woods, long overdue rains finally came.



But what with aberrant conditions now being normal and all…



It turned out the crest was yet to come.