Now that the river has thawed out and most of the snow disappeared we can
walk along the banks and see the latest changes in the river: some meanders
have been widened , new swimming holes dugout and old ones filled in (think
we'll wait before we jump in and find out where..) and the cliffs a little more eroded,
no doubt leaving behind some more fossils.
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Trees desperately hanging on. |
A generation ago the field was a beautiful
pasture for grazing cattle, and there is still find some barbed wire fencing
alongside the river. The wire is now only held up where it has grown into tree
trunks, and much of the fencing has long ago disappeared over the cliff
edge into the river or been buried by the undergrowth.
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Barbed wire growing through the tree |
The field was then left to regenerate with
spruce and pine trees. Where one
generation broke its back to turn a forest into a pasture, another wished to
turn the grassland back into forest to make up for deforestation elsewhere. We
then arrive and decide to clear much of it in order to turn it back to farmland, this time for raspberry and cut-flower production.
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Clearing the field in May 2010 |
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Today: Rows of raspberries & blackberries |
Meanwhile the
wildlife just carries on adapting as us
humans try to make up our minds as to what to do with the land that we have
taken on as custodians.
So the eagles soar above, coyotes and bears watch from the woods (most
of the time..), and the deer just keep on helping themselves to whatever we
grow.
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Coyote scat |
It's a pity you can't tame a coyote to keep the deer at bay!
ReplyDeleteHey, where's the next update??!! been nearly a month since last one ... ! :) x
ReplyDelete