Snow Country…

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Winter may be passing where you are but it’s alive and well in Alberta… We’re enjoying the bright skies and brilliant days…and the new home our grandbabies have just moved to…

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…and a pretty little yard complete with sparrow serenade outside the window every morning…

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Actually, the yard is an answer to a Grandmom’s little prayer, complete with a little tree I’ve dubbed ‘Chase’s Tree’…

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I’ve told him to watch it closely and tell me what happens when the snow melts and spring comes…It’ll be something to talk about long distance, and maybe one day there’ll be a little harvest to pick together…

Our travelling companion this trip… (and no, it’s not Photo Shop’d!)
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And here the two big (little) reasons we’ve come out to Snow Country…
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…and big brother turning 3 this summer..
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Delightful!

–LS

First Snow

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Tonight…snow enough for snowballs, and cold fingers, and a brisk squeaky walk under the streetlights with lemon snow slushie to follow, compliments of my last baby…

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“God thunders with His voice wondrously, Doing great things which we cannot comprehend.
For to the snow He says, ‘Fall on the earth,’ And to the downpour and the rain, ‘Be strong.’”
Job 37:5,6

—LS

Of Trackless Slopes…

There’s something tantalizing about the squeaky s-c-runch of dry new fallen snow.  I set out with extra bundling –two pairs of socks, two pairs of pants, two wool sweaters, gloves and wool mittens–for a quick walk this afternoon.  The weather has snapped cold on us with a bracing rosy-cheek sort of  tang we’re not used to here.  It would have been an ordinary walk up through a wooded trail and around the loop and home except for…

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Winter’s glory!  Entering the woods with the branches topped deliciously with dollops of snow I had to slow my pace and stop for this picture and that one, and then another…

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Glorious day!  The sky had turned blue and the winterscape brilliant.  My walk became a series of steps and stops to look again and click the shutter.  This was wonderful enough. But then the trail turned to skirt the foot of Scout Mountain.

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And I saw the trackless slope upward…. meaning I could be the first up the mountain in the snow.  You have to understand how this hike is transformed in the snow.  There are no longer jutting rocks, or mossy ledges,  only snow-capped trees and underbrush and  gently mounding snow obliterating the trail and inviting my footprints.   I love snow days on Scout.  How could I resist this alluring detour?  I thought, maybe I’ll just go up part way and then circle back down…There’ll be time for that… And without further thought we set our sights on the climb.  Good old Louie took the lead.  Dogs are so amazing.  They don’t need to see the trail, they seem to have it memorized. Or perhaps they smell it? and off they go.  Huffing and puffing behind I had occasion to think what a sweet thing it is to have a Shepherd through life…when storms come and cover familiar trails, the Shepherd knows the way still and leads us forward… He goes ahead, alert for danger, forever with us and looking out for us.

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The hike did not disappoint.  Sub-freezing temp’s couldn’t begin to touch the heat generated in the climb.  The brilliant blue of sky, the sparkling white of snow, the silhouettes of branches trimmed in white…kept luring the camera from my pocket and slowing my steps… IMG_7146IMG_7157IMG_7154IMG_7150

…Until at some point I realized the sky’s blue had faded and the sun was glowing peach and gold.

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And what goes up must come down.  Picture-taking took a back pocket to just getting to the top!  And mental calculations, judging from the spot at which the sun hung above the horizon, suggested the direct descent down the face of Scout would be the most timely option for getting home,

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scary or not… here we come.  No pictures of this part.  The slipping, scooting, sliding, hollering at Louie to ‘wait up!’, slithering, shuffling, sitting! (oops) and finally the destination—the great green field, now a great white sheet.  And the shepherd, having led the way, now had abandoned his charge in his own urgency to make haste home to his dinner and bed!  Well, he hadn’t quite abandoned.  His retreating figure caught my eye in time to hail him down and insist he accompany me home on his tether… By now the fiery glow of sun was spent, leaving just a haze of pink backlighting the wintry world.

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My cheeks felt the glow instead in the bite of wintry wind.  And I was as eager as my dog to hurry home over the squeaking crunch of cast-off snow.

–LS