Category Archives: Observations

Ice Ice Baby

Bird (dog, coyote) feet below the Walterdale Bridge

Wow. Can’t believe I stayed upright for the entire 75 minute walk. It was close, though. The streets were OK, but once I dipped into the river valley, where the temperature is just a little cooler, it was sheer ice. On a slope. The rain this morning didn’t help. However, I’m happy for the longer days, even if the walks are a little challenging. Good for the abs, but must remember to exhale.

Over the Walterdale Bridge and then through Rossdale, hugging the edges of the pathways where there was still traction. Can’t stand those timid little steps across the ice. Cramps my style, and my speed. Better to be slow(ish) I suppose, than fractured.

EPCOR is being dismantled. It’s just OR now. I feel a detour looming, but I hope the south path stays open. It’s suprisingly lovely, when it’s not covered by ice. Saw my one and only marmot, or reasonable facsimile, on the path near EPCOR, I mean OR. Maybe it was a muscrat.

5:40PM/7C

Two Steps Forward, One Step Back

A singular tree in Muttart

As in life, as on the trails. Pretty mucky, and a lot of slip-sliding down the trails, but first day back in Mill Creek. Bit of a cheat, really. I took the LRT to the north side and then walked from downtown. It was 5:25 by the time I emerged out of the woods, or 23 minutes after the sun set. Kinda dark, but OK. In fact, it was quite pleasant. Just me n’ the magpies.

The only thing worse than 65 cm of snow is a sharp rise in the temperature a few days later. I’ve been trying to avoid the streets but most of the river valley paths have to start somewhere. In the ravine, the narrow corridors are still solid snow. It’s just the exposed areas that are mush. Those that aren’t mush are either oatmeal or cookie dough, but a lovely day nonetheless. Beautiful sun, blue skies, warm weather. It’s a much-needed break from god’s wrath.

Sunrise: 8:31 AM/Sunset: 5:02PM

The Light Returns…

The Walterdale snowman

Now that the sun is setting at 4:53 PM, I have a few of the shorter river valley routes back, including Skunk Hollow and Rossdale, but only just. Still pretty dim at the end. By February, I should be able to take some of the longer routes. Unbelievably, it snowed yet again this morning, but by the time I left work

Is that a ten-speed? Nerd.

it stopped, leaving overcast skies and about 2 cm of snow on the unplowed trails.

Walked through the Kinsmen and then under the Walterdale Bridge. Turns out, even the trail icons were not spared a face full of the white stuff. I almost felt sorry for them, especially the biker. Doesn’t look like he was dressed for it.

5:25PM/1C

Finally

This is your branch on snow

A long walk. Finally. More than an hour. After almost two weeks of frightful weather, we caught a break. It warmed up. Yesterday, more snow and -20C. I did walk home, a short 25 minute jaunt down Saskatchewan Drive, head tucked in collar, hat pulled down so far I could barely see the path in front of me. Not that there was path, just an accumulation of boot prints.

The lovely Rossdale: 60 cm and counting...

Today, the sun was bright, the temperature a balmy -7C, and it was really, really gorgeous. The feeling was akin to being locked inside a dark, waxy cave, unable to exit, waiting for release, which finally arrived at 4:20 this afternoon. Freedom, in other words. For the last week, I’ve been wearing ‘the Kommissar’, my double-breasted Russian overcoat which only comes out when the weather turns Siberian. It weighs a ton and it’s very, very warm. Nice coat, but it’s exhausting. Putting on a fleece and a light jacket this morning was like wearing nothing at all. Nyet, nyet Soviet.

The snowbanks are huge! The paths are more like corridors, and let me tell ya, there are very few of them. Most of my walk was a real slog, and it’s quite interesting to see which routes the city deems to be plow-worthy and those that are abandoned to the elements. The bike paths through the woods are plowed (with Bobcats…heh.) The sidewalks along River Road and up 99th Street, not plowed. The Low Level Bridge sidewalk (west side), not plowed. I looked like a drunk maneuvering my way through the river valley, but you know, sober. And faster.

So, the walk was tiring but beautiful, and oh so necessary. I feel better. I think. Tomorrow, the temperature is supposed to tank again, but I’m leaving the Kommissar where it is, in my closet, making plans to overthrow the anorak. I’ll take the short walk again tomorrow, and then back on the trails Thursday. I’m done with the cave.

5:45PM/-7C

Sunrise: 8:40AM /Sunset: 4:49PM (32 minutes gained since Christmas)

The Bobcat of Mill Creek

Now that we’ve officially entered the dog-days of winter, by which I mean, the shitty part, I thought I’d use the time I would have spent on the trails to relate my most embarrassing river valley story. This is a real whopper, although for the people who know me, it is neither surprising nor especially unusual.

It happened about three years ago, on a beautiful December afternoon. I was walking home, having been released from work several hours early as a sort of pre-Christmas gift from the boss. I used the time, not to shop or to bake, but to take a long walk in one of my favourite places on earth, Edmonton’s river valley, and in particular, Mill Creek Ravine. It has for many years, been a place of peace and discovery, the scene of coyotes and pileated woodpeckers, and even the occasional moose. A previous nights’ storm had transformed Mill Creek into a breathtaking marshmallowscape. Heaps of sparkling virgin snow piled knee-deep in the ravine, inviting the first perfect footprint. Irresistible.

Walking is my meditation. It’s easy to fall into a kind of altered state while traversing the many winding paths in the river valley. The constant birdsong of chickadees and sparrows and the ever-changing landscape is the boreal equivalent of Ommmm, erasing the extraneous and focusing my mind on the moment. In this state, I am apt to believe anything.

While most of the monkey trails in Mill Creek rely on hikers and cross-county skiers to tramp out the routes, the upper path is paved and maintained by the city, so by the time I emerged out of the deepest part of the ravine, breathing heavily from the exertion of wading through a quarter mile of soft-serve ice cream, the trail had already been plowed.

Squeaking along the snow-scraped surface of the trail, admiring the contrast of the cobalt blue sky against white, hoar-frosted spruce trees, I noticed an older gentleman standing by one of the exits to the ravine. Even at a distance, I could see he was angry. His hands were on his hips, and he seemed to be waiting for me, waiting to say something. I did not feel threatened, it was more of a relaxed sort of curiosity. As I approached, the man was shaking his head.

“God-damned bobcat!” he said, his face burnished red from the cold.

“Bobcat?” I asked.

“God-damned bobcat knocked over the post.” he said, pointing to the ground.

I looked down and saw a post, bent at a 90-degree angle and laying across the snow.

“Bobcat? You saw…a bobcat?” I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.

“God-damned thing. Came screaming down the path, hell-bent for leather. Don’t care what they destroy!”

“A bobcat? Here? In the river valley?” That is so awesome!” At this point in the conversation I was almost apoplectic, my brain madly flipping through its visual filofax, searching for images of bobcats. Thickly-furred felines with long black tufts on their ears, leaping through Mill Creek, smaller than a mountain lion maybe, but definitely bigger than my 20 pound house cat, flashed before my eyes.

“I had no idea we had bobcats!” I said, flushed with excitement.

The man stared at me, his face contorted in anger but shadowed by what I now know was a nuance of confusion. “Um yeah. About ten minutes ago. I was up on the hill, just over there, and I watched ’em run over the sign. Started way down the trail and just wouldn’t stop. Unbelievable. If I’d been closer I would have said something, but the damned thing was too fast.”

“That must have been something. Where was he exactly?” I asked, my arm grandly gesturing toward the ravine.

“Just down there.” He pointed to the far end of the trail. “Came barreling through. Good thing no one was on the path.”

“Except for you.”

“Uh yeah. Except for me, although I was…”

“Lucky!”

“Um….”

Even through my barely contained joy, I noticed that we seemed strangely out of sync with one another, talking at cross-purposes. The more excited I got, the less vehement his tirade. Clearly, the man wasn’t digging this spectacular new arrival in the river valley. Must be an animal-hater.

I quickly pondered the possibility of searching for the bobcat, but as the mid-winter sun was already setting, I decided to exit the river valley, eager to share my good news with friends and family.

“Really, really fantastic. I’ve never seen a bobcat down here. Thanks for letting me know. Well, have a great afternoon!” I waved. Wow. A bobcat!

“Uh yeah. You too.” The man walked away, looking oddly deflated.

I headed toward the wooden staircase, stepping over the broken sign post. On the first stair, I stopped.

Oh.

Like the moment in The Usual Suspects when the camera flips from coffee cup to bulletin board and the detective realizes that Kevin Spacey is Kaiser Soze, my mind suddenly and brutally emerged out of its euphoric stupor.

Oh.

~the sign post was metal. No cat, bobcat or otherwise, could knock over a metal post, or even a wooden one, for that matter.

~Edmonton, including its lovely urban river valley, is Oil Country, not Bobcat Country.

~abandoned ravine cats, by species and temperament, are not bobcats, although they may have at one time been named ‘Bob’

~the old man, who in hindsight was understandably angry at the destruction of public property and seeking nothing but a little commiseration with a fellow river valley walker, was not, as I’d assumed, venting his anger at rufus felidae, but at a machine. A skid loader. A snow remover. A Bobcat.

I wanted to run over to the man and tell him that I understood (now) what he’d been talking about, that I was not an idiot, that I knew he didn’t mean a large spotted cat but a machine with a cage and a motor and a scraper thing. But, it was too late. I could not unring the dumbbell.

Stupid. Stupid. Stupid.

I was so embarrassed, I could barely walk. Bobcat? Oh_my_god. Hot steaming shame oozed out of my pores, turning the once jolly marshmallow snowscape into shriveled goo, sliding off the branches, sticking to my boots, impeding my quick exit out of the god-damned ravine.

Bobcatsaremachinesbobcatsaremachinesbobaalawaaawggggarawww…

Within a few hours, my shame had dissipated to the point where I began to feel just a little, I don’t know, impressed by the gargantuan stupidity of my error. It still impresses me. Years later, the episode has morphed into a kind of badge of dishonour. I am known as ‘bobcat auntie’ to my nieces, to distinguish me from my sister, aka: ‘church auntie’. (Don’t ask…suffice to say public humiliation runs in the family.) When I say things like, ‘You’ll never guess what I just saw!” the answer is always, “A bobcat?”, regardless of the respondent, or the situation. The mental torture is particularly acute in winter, when friends and family bombard me with reports of bobcats roaming the streets of snowy Edmonton. Ah well. I deserve it. I mean, really. A bobcat in Mill Creek? Seriously.

Snowbound

my sentiments exactly...

As the great Dorothy Parker once said, “It’s shittacular out there!’  And it is. No walk today, and probably not for another week. Just a short trudge to my local mercantile to buy some kerosene and a can of lard. Brutal. More than 30 cm of snow, giant snowdrifts on the sidewalks, and great gusts of wind. Must be January. Why do we have January anyway? Or February? Why not just skip these months (March too), and head straight to April? I could go for a little Easter right about now…

2:26PM/-17C