Spring is a season of changes and after a good hard winter with abundant snow, there's a lot of change to happen. We'll start with Lake Wicwas itself. It will take a while to melt this year's thick ice, especially with a deep snow pack to insulate it, but the warm March sun (only a week now until the vernal equinox) is starting to do its work even though the first signs may be hidden. Some of the snow will sublimate directly into the atmosphere, but some will melt and get trapped at the surface of the lake. One might never know it's happening until a step is taken onto to the lake on a warm day - or a snowmobile passes by.
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| Snowmobiles on the lake reveal what's hidden under the snow. |
Compressing the snow, whether by foot or machine, reveals several inches of watery slush under the snow. If you keep moving it's not too bad because it takes a moment for the snow to get saturated, but if you stop you can sink deep into wetness.
The slush freezes up when it gets cold enough over night, which happened later in the week.
I mentioned previously how temperature is stabilized in the subnivean zone at the interface of land and snow; by this time of year with such good snow cover, that open gap is getting big enough for larger animals to hang out down there. I watched a red squirrel one morning eating bird seed, and ducking down into its safe room whenever something startled it. At times it would climb up to a high spot to scan for dangers before resuming its meal. In this video I cut out the long section where it just sat still, observing from its sentry.
My most interesting observation this week was where otters had found their own secret path through the subnivean zone from lake to land where they established a latrine. They somehow found - or created - an opening some three feet from the lake which they used to emerge from the depths.
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| The lake is off to the left of the tree. |
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The number of tracks, staining on the snow, and size of the latrine tell me this has had a lot of use..jpg)
One more sign of animals digging down under the snow was this hole where a Red Squirrel tunneled down to access one of its caches of pine cones.
Last night mother nature freshened up the scenery with a couple of inches of new snow, just what we need in March to keep things pretty. .jpg)
Heading into late March now, there may not be many more skiing opportunities left around the lake this winter, even with a lot of snow on the ground and 19 inches of ice still in the lake!
It will be while before we see blue water.
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