A Morning Wrapped in Ice
    As soon as I looked outside this morning, through the small space between the curtain and the edge of the glass door by our bed, I knew I was in for a treat. The few small branches I could see were encased in ice. But I would have to move fast; I knew from experience that the sparkling wonderland the woods had become would soon melt away.
    Taking time only to dress and to tend our two woodstoves, I dashed out. Hearing what sounded like a steady rain, I knew I had already missed the ice-enveloped scene at its peak.Â
    What sounded like rain was instead water dripping from hundreds–thousands–of branches, twigs, and berries, as the warming morning released them from their icy embrace.  To walk beneath a tree was to be ‘rained’ on.Â
    Walking from the front door to our driveway meant stooping to pass beneath a new, temporary arch. The slender holly tree that usually stands upright next to the house was bent over, under the weight of the ice that outlined its branches. As I moved farther up the driveway, the stalks of bamboo growing at the driveway’s edge were bent far over, many of them resting on the driveway. While I could lift the bamboo stalks only with difficulty, I knew that they would begin to straighten as the ice melted, and before long they would completely resume their usual posture.
    I had to visit the deeper forest while this transformation lasted. So down the side of the ridge I walked, marveling as I went. Now at the corkscrew willow branch resting on the ground, its curling twigs made all the more vivid by their frame of ice. Now at the graceful little dogwood, its red berries shining all the brighter from within their glassy coatings. And now at the red maple, always pleasing in the spare, curved line of its trunk, today looking even more elegant under its low, wide crown glistening with ice.
    Once I descended a little farther, I saw a dramatic scene. The little white pine saplings that dot an open area were all bowed reverently, their tops touching the ground. These tiny bending figures immediately brought to mind the Muslim children I taught several years ago, who prayed every day, with their heads to the ground. Unlike the children, however, the bowed pines did not all face Mecca.
    After some time in the forest, I climbed the steep hill to the top of the ridge and followed the dirt road that runs along it. What a pleasure to look out to the east on such a morning.  Hills, some near, some far, and others in-between, were interspersed with misty clouds. As in a Chinese painting, the hills were softened, made more mysterious by the mists that partially obscured their shapes. Â
    Turning and heading back toward home, I noticed here and there, beside the road, sparkling bits of ‘glass,’ blown from the branches before they could melt away. For a few moments these bits of ice were little jewels. Then they disappeared into the soil.–April Moore




December 17th, 2008 at 10:10 pm
Lovely. Thanks for shairing your walk in such descriptive terms. We’ve had ice here too but not on the trees like your version, but on the streets and driveways. I know you had that too but it can’t compete with the artistry nature creates among its organic elements. I just wish I could wax poetic about my 92 y/o friend who slipped and fell into a pole on her way to the mail box and smashed her mouth. And another friend who slipped and fell and broke her ankle. I don’t usually know so many people who’ve suffered from what I just accept as a natural beauty as in as your description. It was an jolt to my innocent love of an icy landscape to have it happen. On a different level of thought on icy scenes…cold and dampness also create wonderful scenes with hore(sp?) frost as well as ice. I imagine your trees having fascinating beauty when it occurs around you.
December 18th, 2008 at 9:22 am
Beautiful description of a winter wonderland!
December 18th, 2008 at 2:09 pm
Yes, April, I rare and splendid sight, the ice strom. And lucky for you to have the variety of trees to refract it all. Thanks, Todd
December 19th, 2008 at 6:47 am
What a beautiful piece of prose! Thank you, April.
December 20th, 2008 at 10:05 pm
April,
Thank you for taking all of this in and sharing it with the rest of us. I do not have the ability to take in what you do from nature, but interestingly, I think I get more of what you see and feel when you transform it into a piece of art with written words.
I especially liked the way you conveyed the sense of urgency to take it all in while it lasted–starting from when you eyes first opened, to hearing rain, to being now at this tree, now this, now this, faster and faster, to take it all in before it melted back to what it was before.
Send us more like this!
December 21st, 2008 at 6:48 am
Thanks, April, I almost felt as though I were there with you. This morning, as I look out my office window at the glassy branches and twigs, recalling scraping the ice off my car and treading very gently on th icy sidewalks, I appreciate the acute intersection between the gasp at the beauty and the gasp of fear at the treacherous footing. And how it happens at times that danger and beauty are each appreciated the more because of that interaction!
March 19th, 2009 at 8:08 pm
April,
Thank you for leading me through your icy landscape. We have snow and rain in New Mexico, but rarely ice. I wish i had been there to walk it with you. Linda