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Winter to Spring and on the Edge of Summer


I do love to watch the world wake up, all those transitions between winter and spring and summer, to falling back asleep again in autumn, the wind down before winter. 

still winter and a spectacular sunset on I84, the Columbia to the north
 
(On a random note, I do need to get back into taking the big camera with me, now that Dory-the-destroyer has finally settled in and is less of a holy terror to keep up with. She still requires a substantial amount of exercise, but her impulse control and listening abilities are far better than they used to be.)

Deschutes River Trail
I think, technically, this was the first day of spring. One truth about desert landscapes is that they rebound quickly. This area was a blackened mess after the Substation fire burned over 80,000 acres in 2018. The bones of the landscape and the river canyon is what always makes the Deschutes a beautiful winter hike to me. 

still just the barest traces of snow on the upper hills

the bestest girls


Andy and Dory, making their way down to the river

looking down from the road walk, all the sage burned

dog tax


Lacamas Park
Such a charming city park, surrounded on all sides by suburbia. It feels like a deep forest hike on the edge of waking up from winter. I’ve been putting in lots of winter miles here, in the rain, with my girls. 


lily fields are still sleeping


cutest little shrooms ever


Catherine Creek/Coyote Wall  
Much like the Deschutes River trail, the eastern portion of the Columbia River gorge is always the first to embrace spring. The Catherine Creek/Coyote Wall complex has seen an explosion of increased visitation since I first started hiking it in 2010. It remains one of my favorite areas. Word to the wise though- the entire area is riddled with poison oak and ticks…the early season flowers are beautiful though. 

Hood from Tracy Hill on a spectacular spring day

just a few basalm starting



Catherine Creek is well-known for its flowers

my favorite, lupine

following old road down towards the Arch
 
Trapper Creek
It’s been a few years since I last hiked the Trapper Creek trail, and my legs forgot how steep it is in places. The trees are still enormous and humbling, and the entire area feels very, very old. I did manage to get a little creeped out again, which is unusual for me. However, when the woods are perfectly silent, with no insect or birdsong, they can feel foreboding. 





Now, for the high country to open up….

Feeding the Carnivores

a fairly recent addition last year, a tropical sundew

I am obsessed with carnivorous plants.

It started as a single pitcher plant four years ago when we first moved into this house. And now? Well, I think I might have a problem. I have twenty-one of them. And I want more...lol.

My first plant is front left, in the orange pot. This is the first year it has bloomed


Another of my first plants, the pitchers are getting really tall. The tallest currently is probably about 2 feet


I was honestly surprised how little effort they take, so long as they have the right growing conditions. They do best outdoors (at least the cold hardy varieties do), in full sun with poor soil. They just have to stay in water. They go dormant in the winter, and they seem to do best if they have a dormancy period. By mid spring they revive and the pitchers throw out blooms. And they have beautiful and unique blossoms. 


The plants all have no smell EXCEPT this one. The flowers smell a little like cat urine. yech


LOVE the blooms in this grouping of north american pitcher plants
 
Behold my brood of bug eaters. By the end of summer they are stuffed with bugs. I love it.


The classic venus fly trap. It will be much bigger by the end of summer

My first pitcher plant and probably my current favorite in the background, a stag horn sundew
  
this venus fly trap is still itty bitty

sundews are like glistening death traps
 
itty bitty sundews in a sarracenia pot
 
beautiful striped hoods on our newest plant

the fullest the blooms get