"Hey, Mom! Look what I found," Noah said holding up a branch pulled from the forest floor.
"It's those giant pine cones that are really long. Can we take them home and make a wreath or something?"
Soon we were loading branches – of a timbered white-pine into our car's trunk – with Christmas in our minds.
We'd stopped at this particular trailhead to check out the ice forming on a pond we'd noticed during our Saturday-morning forest drive.
(Dad and the boys were away: pheasant hunting with family and on a church youth-group retreat.)
Then Noah and I walked down to the pond to see winter's first signs.
Across the thin, translucent sheet of ice, I admired slivers of tree-top reflections around a mossy log.
"Look at this!" Noah said holding up a couple leaves trapped in a small plate of ice.
As I focused my camera on his find, Noah said: "Hurry up! It's melting down my arm!"
On the trek back to the car, Noah noticed a fuzzy, hollow log. "That looks like a cozy, little place for somebody to hibernate."
As we wound along the forest road toward home, we discussed creative options for the pine cones: wreaths, outdoor pot arrangements and ornaments.
"Remember those gold spray-painted angels?" I asked. " We could try those. We'll need a some kind of nut for the head and milkweed pods for wings. "
We stopped near another water body to add milkweed pods to our car trunk collection.
"You know what?" Noah said.
"You should
make a
blog with
everything
we found
and call it "Noah's Discoveries." "That's a great idea," I agreed.
Sunday afternoon, Noah reminded me about the pine cone arrangements.
Light snow fell
flocking the spruce boughs
as we trimmed a few
from our tree line
at home.
In a plant pot weighted with stones, we stuck a few spruce sprigs and a couple branches of long, white-pine cones.
Viola!
Christmas –
including the Norwegian tradition of cat and pig –
amidst Noah's Discoveries.
1 comment:
Welcome to the Christmas Season. Thanks, Noah!
Ant B.
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