Once upon a Hike

It might come as a surprise, but despite my almost daily updates with enviable scenery, most of my life is spent in front of the computer screen. In fact, a good part of it involves screaming at the said screen, my scapegoat of choice!

Therefore, this past weekend was my first time in the mountains during this early-snow season, including two brief hikes.

A mobile shot of this trooper, camera and lenses strapped to the shoulder, ready to head out.

Even the hikes were the computer's fault: I needed to exercise myself and my dog, Roediger, and walking up a rather steep incline with snow past the ankles always does the job.  

You see, I measure a hike's success by how long my dog passes out for afterward.

He slept the rest of the day.

Of course, Roediger's experiences in this quasi-wilderness always exceed mine exponentially. First, after obsessively digging the snow, he discovered several frozen pieces of flesh--some, with black fur still intact.

I'm not sure when the massacre occurred, or by whose jaws, paws, and claws. I just hope the victim wasn't human! ;)

Then Roediger chased the mountain's most common residents, mule deer, down the cliff.

Neither the adults, nor the youngster seemed all that fazed by a 55-pound beast with long ears and giant paws, however. In fact, they just gave us the evil eye and continued to chew fiber-rich...everything.

The evil eye is a particularly effective strategy when used by a cute furbaby with a BLACK UNIBROW.

It certainly deterred us.

Oh, and while all of this was happening, I ran into the local Sasquatch, but you can only see his shadow.

hiking snow 3 850 px.jpg

I think he might've been wearing ski goggles to conceal his identity!

We climbed higher and higher, and what seemed like the top of the world was reduced to every shade of blue.

It was there that I shot my prized-possession photos of a fairly uncommon black-backed woodpecker. She was a very determined lady, to boot, if the tree riddled with beak holes is of any indication. (This avian will get her own blog entry.)

We stopped for a while to rest and to listen to what turned into an impressively rhythmic solo.

Another sound, more subtle than the best female drummer this side of the Rockies, was my favorite part.

At one point, it was so quiet, so deafeningly quiet, that we could hear the flapping wings of an always mythic raven flying past us only to disappear in the unbearable whiteness of the sunlit, partly iced-over lake.

Raven Ravenson

It took a ten-hour road trip, and I wasn't even looking for him, but I found Raven Ravenson! 

Fit enough for Slavic fairy tales and to be Odin's companion alike (he looked more like Munnin to me), I interpreted the appearance of this jaw-dropping specimen as a very good sign.

Of course, I'm pretty much IN LOVE with darker-than-darkest-night Corvus birds, so I might be slightly biased.

Black, Red, and White

Normally, when I chase avians, I try to be as quiet as possible, getting to them as close as possible with or without a telephoto lens. Then, like clockwork, I step on some branch, and off they go. Kodak moment ruined!

Perhaps, I should reconsider my urban habit of wearing stilettos here in the near-wilderness after all. Oh, and bringing along my hunting-breed dog, who is "slow in pursuit, but match'd in mouth like bells" (at least according to Shakespeare in Midsummer Night's Dream and anyone else who has ever heard a basset).

But sometimes, only sometimes, birds literally pose for me. I mean, what else would you call this blackbird below deliberately positioning itself against a red-and-white backdrop? ;)


Avian Fashionista

This particular robin obviously knew that orange looked good against the color blue and posed for me accordingly. Not only has this bird taken color theory in art class, but it also cared about fashion more than I do (and I'm a lady--supposedly! ;) ). In fact, I'm almost embarrassed enough to change out of these track pants!