The Bishop and the Butterfly: Murder, Politics, and the End of the Jazz Age
    Ramona's picture

    Fall Comes to the U.P.

     

    At the easternmost edge of Michigan's Upper Peninsula, where I live, the land is low.  In the deep south it would be called the low country.  Here it's called the cedar swamp.  Where there isn't swamp there is rock, where thin sheaths of earth allow only the shallow-rooted trees to thrive--the quaking aspen, white birch and the Michigan cottonwood known as Balm-of-Gilead.  The weed trees.
     

    Cedar and birch

     

    As beautiful as these trees are in the fall, it's the maple and oak that thrill us with their gaudy, exuberant colors.  It's the views from lofty heights of miles of patchwork quilt, the breathtaking drives through golden tunnels, the blue and gold of our Great Lakes, that draw millions of tourists each year to northern Michigan and across the Mackinac Bridge into the upper peninsula.

    There are small areas here in the eastern edge of the peninsula that are high enough and have built up enough forest humus to support the hardwoods that give us the most color, but to truly appreciate the spectacle, one has to go west.  Which is what we did last week.
     

    Maple stand in Eastern U.P
     

    Grand Island and Munising Bay

     

    Munising Falls

     

    Lower Tahquamenon Falls

     But back at home or nearer to it, fall means clear air and a golden light and new discoveries every day.  A few weeks ago we were driving the back roads near Rudyard when we came upon a field full of sand hill cranes.  It's  been a few years since we've seen them gathering, and it's about time for their migration.  Michigan is one of many flyways as they move from the far north to the places where they winter.
     


    A family of cranes has nested across the bay, within sight with binoculars, but this is the first year we've seen them on our shore.

     


    Yesterday as we walked our circular mile, we kept hearing the cranes but couldn't see them.  Finally, as we came to a clearing, I looked up and saw them by the dozens high in the sky.   They're leaving now and I'm not ready to say goodbye.
     

    Sand Hill Cranes heading South
     

    In our part of the country, fall is not just a season, it's an event.  We never take it for granted, and we never miss a chance to revel in it. And, of course, I never miss a chance to photograph it.  We live near several nature preserves and walk their trails often, but in fall their free access is a glorious gift.
     

    Young trees in fall

     

    A carpet of leaves

     

    The tamaracks are the last to turn.  They signal the end of the fall colors; when they're done it's all over.  Tamarack needles fall off, leaving the branches bare, and a stand of winter tamaracks looks like dead trees in a dismal swamp.  Then, in spring, their needles come back mint green, then turn forest green, and they're back to looking like conifers again.
     

    Tamaracks in fall

     

    Northern Michigan is pretty special any time of the year, but in the fall it rises to spectacular.  I love that about my state.


    (Photos are the property of Ramona's Voices.  Please ask permission before using.)

    Comments

    We are just about done here. The leaves have fallen. 22 degrees is the rule in the early morn.

    Beautiful pix; but they could have been taken anywhere within a few miles of here.

    Why is dying so damn beautiful?


    I'm sure you're seeing what I'm seeing most of the the time, even though we're probably 4 or 500 miles apart.  I would say that fall is my favorite time of year, but when it starts to get cold I'm reminded too much of winter.

    But I don't see it as dying, since the trees are still alive.  It's more like shedding old skin.  I do love to shuffle through the leaves, though.  I don't know why I get such a kick out of that, but I do.


    In the last six weeks I have driven across Colorado twice, once on a motorcycle and last week in my car. The stretch from Salida, over Monarch Pass, and on through Gunnison towards Montrose was like a stroboscopic collage of jig saw puzzle pictures of mountains in the fall. On the river bottoms the grass was still largely green but the trees had turned and were brilliant gold. It felt almost surreal it was so calendar like beautiful for mile after mile.

     Also, as I drove I listened to a very good book I had somehow missed ever reading. "Ender's Game" seemed like it could have been written yesterday. The whole thing made me think about "What a long strange trip its been". From game to game, but a lot of it has been pretty cool.


    Sounds wonderful, Lulu.  We were in Denver one fall and drove up to Rocky Mountain National Park.  It was spectacular!  I do know that Michigan doesn't hold a patent on fall color, but I guess to me there's no place like home. wink

    I love to listen to good music when I'm in beautiful places.  Usually it's light classical but I'm open to anything that's melodic and doesn't scream.


    I am betting that you are absolutely right, there is no place like home.