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Waiting for Spring at 3500 Feet

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April 24, 2005
Shenandoah National Park
 

April 7, 2008

Republished by popular demand,

I demanded it.

 

 

Of course spring is different each year, but April 7, 2008 is not as far along as April 24, 2005.  The progress of spring described in the article probably won'd occur until about that time in April.  Yet by April 7, 2008, I have already seen my first black bear of the season.  I have seen two Tom turkeys strutting and displaying their fanned tail feathers to each other to claim their turf.  Yesterday, (4/06/08) I saw bloodroot blossoms peeking out.  The deer are everywhere along Skyline Drive, and I think I saw a Northern Harrier in Big Meadows already.

 

05/27/08

Spring has sprung!  Yellow ladies slippers are being found.  Wild geraniums are abundant!  Leaves are out on most trees!  A great weather day showed up for all three days of Memorial Day weekend.

Come on up, the weather is great.

I expect that when the weather gets better up here, my wife, the love of my life, may spend more time here with me.  But she would need to leave spring at its best in our yard at home to join me on here on the Blue Ridge Mountains.  Spring is still climbing the mountain.  The earliest tree buds are now showing at altitudes of about 2500 to 3000 feet, with lots of wildflowers blooming below 2000 feet.  But here at Big Meadows, at 3500 feet above sea level, the dawn temperature this morning was 28 degrees, and it has been snowing horizontally most of the day, but not accumulating.   There are only a few early wild flowers peeking out.


Strange sensation today: I walked out to the high altitude wetland in the middle of the 130 acre Big Meadows around
noon today.  With the snow blowing in my ear, I was listening to the spring peepers (tree frogs) calling for mates like it was a perfectly good spring day.   Unlike their normal caution, they did not stop singing as I approached.  They kept on shouting out with joy in the loud rising pitch whistle that makes them so enjoyable to humans who keep their distance.

                                

Two days ago, I drove south along Skyline Drive for an hour and a half to go 40 miles in fog.   The fog was so thick that visibility from the car was 50 to 100 feet.  I then hiked a 1.7 mile trail to Calvary Cliffs and Chimney Rock.  The elevation there was low enough to have a few tree buds bursting open all along the way and a few wildflowers beside the trail.  My return on the trail and drive back to Big Meadows was all in fog except for a few stretches of the drive that had 1/8 mile visibility.

 

Yesterday, I drove north on the drive to areas where the drive is mostly below 2500 feet.  Spring was everywhere.  Redbuds and dogwoods and a dozen different kinds of wildflowers attempted to distract my attention from the many light green shades of trees popping their leaves out of hibernation.  The red maples were showing red fuzz all over.  

 

Spring should be at its beginnings here in Big Meadows within a week to ten days.  I can't wait.

 

                                                        -- Ranger Bob


p.s.  On April 25, 2005, Big Meadows got a late snow.  It was just an inch laying on the ground, and it melted away by 10:30 AM, but I showed that spring is wonderfully unpredictable at 3500 feet.

Copyright Robert M. Kuhns, 2005

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