Here from There

On May the 4th 2022 I took my new knee out for a walk.

Even though it had been a long cold winter I was surprised to see that Star Lake was still frozen over as I turned down the road to the Trampers trail.

Snow was still hiding in the shade on the trail and in patches along my hike.

The sun of spring still had not brought out the buds on the trees or caused the grass to green but gave hope as I positioned myself to enjoy its warmth.

Patience is what I was being told to practice with my knee replacement recovery and also the recapture of summer. By May 14 2022 I could detect that spring could be delayed but not stopped.

I could no longer hold out my want to test my new knee in the water. The air temperature was a record setting 88 and the water temperature was a not so inviting 58 degrees when I entered Bass Lake. As I was getting my fins on two loons popped up out of the water to welcome me back and then disappeared below the surface of the water.

I endured for forty minutes in the brisk water my hands and feet throbbing from the chill of the water while my shoulders began to burn from the heat of the sun.

Like the plats on land the plants in the water were starting to reach for the warmth of the sun and as I photo’d them a sun fish checked me out from above and I made it from here there here

Air dweller

I am in the middle of my recovery from knee replacement and I have not kept up on my blog posts. The ice is still on the lakes of northern Wisconsin but it is showing signs of withdrawing and hiding until it is recalled and reruns next winter. With my limited mobility I think of all the places I need to return to and places I need to checkout and photo.

My mind deliberates on the fish I come across on my snorkeling adventures and I wonder what they think of me and why I am there, or do they just think “look an air dweller what is it doing here?”

Pan fish and bass seem to be the most curious of the freshwater fish I come across they stop their routine and examine me and will look me strait in the eye.

Muskies the largest fish in the fresh water lakes of northern Wisconsin are loners and I will sometimes catch them out of the corner of my eye shadowing me and when I turn to photo them they tire of me and easily disappear into the surroundings.

Perch try to camouflage into their environment keeping their distance while keeping an eye I on me.

Crappies are a shy fish that when we encounter each other they are gone as soon as I see them.

One of the wariest fish is the trout and of all my years snorkeling I have only chanced on them one at a time as they dart past into the safety of the deep.

This past fall was the first time I was astonished to see a school of them pass right in front of me making me wonder if I am the fun house mirror of the things I see.

Summer Dreams

My thoughts drift over an ice and snow covered lake in the middle of March in northern Wisconsin.

Aspirations of a not so far-off time when a warming sun hangs in the sky longer and I can get back to this same lake and snorkel its unfrozen waters.

Where tree roots and fallen trees take on the appearances of mythical beasts waiting for me to snorkel by and photograph them.

I can spend my time exploring favorite spots to see how time and the seasons have changed them since I was there last year.

Or I can adventure off into bays I have not yet explored and photographed.

Until nature reminds me who is in charge and tells me when it’s time to go.

First Snow

Snow had gracefully dusted the ground and trees like powdered sugar on a donut reminding me that winter would again return to northern Wisconsin.

The lakes had not yet iced over but small puddles did and they trapped air in geometric shapes on their surface.

Snow landed on the tops of brush that high water had broken off to give the manifestation that snow mushrooms had sprouted out of the lake.

The snow filled in the spaces around needles of the white pine turning them into tiny winter Sputniks that orbited their planet trees.

Birds nourished themselves on suit and seeds preparing for the long winter. 

Shapes and reflections materialized on the surface of the lake on this cold and cloudy day that had chaperoned this first snow.

Boo! blog

This Halloween when you find yourself on the road to nowhere

And you cross the boundary from real to surreal

You happenstance on the oracle of past and future

Who guides you through the windows of actuality

Remember to brush and floes those teeth after eating all that candy.

Courting the Muse

As a photographer / artist inspiration is all around me but I cannot always find it and as the saying goes – I can’t see the forest because of the trees.

I must open my mind and my camera lens and court my Muse appreciating that I might not find the picture I am looking for but discover the photo that opportunity gives me.

On a recent fall day driving aimlessly the back roads in the western part of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula I crest the top of a hill to discover a phantasmagoria of falls delight.

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I park my car and ramble around this panorama camera at the ready.

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Also in my drive I find an old mining town now a museum and photo the fall colors mirrored in the old windows.

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I enjoy the trees around me as I thank the Muse for allowing me this happenstance of life and beauty.

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Top to bottom

Summer has decided to spend more time vacationing in the Northwood’s of Wisconsin and me and my eight year old self are grateful and we hop on the bike and head to the beach for a swim.

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I swim in the reflection of the clouds that mirror the sky above

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The undersurface of the lake mirrors the world underwater like the surface does the sky above.

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Do the clouds, sun, fish, plants and I occupy two planes of reality at the same time?

Familiarity breeds contempt

My narrative if you have not experienced it you will have to believe me as I re-count my latest snorkeling adventure. The summer solstice has recently passed and the sun lazily traverses the sky, the days of norther Wisconsin seem to never want to end and the short daylight hours and cold of December never to return. The long daylight hours warm the many lakes and this brings all types of life into to the shallows of the lakes to do what the kids might say “getting busy” reproducing to continue the cycle of life.

 The first thing I came across is a bass taking cover in the branches of a sunken downed tree perhaps taking a break from the obligations of being a bass?

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Working my way south down the shore I find a bass aggressively defending its nest of just recently hatched fry

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from being eaten by a horde of ravenous minnows.

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 If the bass is somewhat successful and some of its fry grow into bass-hood those same bass will have the advantage in the game of eat or be eaten taking exception to the song lyrics “summer time and the living is easy”

               Pan fish excavate fields of craters in sand, gravel or just about any material in clusters of 5 to 25 or more in a group on the bottom of the lake bed that they use as nests to lay their eggs.

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A male pan fish (the smaller one) bumps the belly of the female as she circles their recently dug nest so that she will lay her eggs and he can fertilize them.

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Like the bass the pan fish will protect their nest of recently laid eggs

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from all comers charging at them opening out its fins to look bigger and more menacing even trying to intimidate a lone photographing snorkeler who just wants to chronical there life’s struggles.

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To be a witness of the things going on around us that familiarity can breed contempt for I am given the chance to show existence is not easy for anyone.

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