Thursday, December 22, 2022

Spokane Solstice

                           ❄️Winter ‘22 — coldest in over a decade❄️

                                          Ice crystals form over cabin windows ❄️

 
Solstice  dawned bright and shining. 
The basalt columns look like frosted cupcakes.


Lotus’s footprints en route to mailbox with kitty..


                                                       This dry powdery snow does pile up quickly.❄️

                                                      The route from cabin down Lewis
  Temps have been below 0. Windchill takes that down further. But in the mid day sun ☀️ it’s pretty nice.


…And back to cabin for some freshly baked Gingerbread 😋 Yum.






Saturday, December 10, 2022

Wild Men and Women of Winter

                                                              Winter gone WILD!   ❄️❄️❄️


                                           The Wild Men of Europe ❄️❄️❄️❄️❄️❄️



                        It’s a wild white wonderland ❄️ In wintertime 
                                 Who knows who, or what you might meet!


                          Indeed, ungrateful urchins shall soon find themselves stuffed within the Krampus Sack!


…And perhaps taken to Iceland, there to meet the fanged justice of the terrible Yule Cat!
       

Men and women gone wild…this time of year all over the land, something about the change of seasons, of the Solstice, light and dark, a liminal time betwixt and between…man and beast, or thing….❄️❄️❄️
But we need not venture far, to find tales of The Wild and men who become so…in Pennsylvania, and into the hill country, as far north as Nova Scotia, you will hear whispers of The Belsnickle…..

Sometimes referred to as Peltschnickle, as he is sometimes clad in furs or animal pelts.
He would tap on the windows and doors with sticks before entering. Once inside the house, he would ask whether or not the children had been good that year.

If the children had been naughty, he would threaten to hit them with the switches — or sticks — that he carried with him. But for the good kids, they could expect some small treats like nuts, fruits or candies.

To hear the tale told by famous folklorist Timothy Renner, click on link.

https://www.strangefamiliars.com/home/belsnickel-the-christmas-wild-man


Santa Lucia, her head aflame in the night!


And we also have Italy to thank for Belfana, the Christmas Witch!





Christmas before Christ: A beauteous and fascinating tale of how folk celebrated Yule and the Solstice.



Horns are popular with a wild magical childe.



Winter Wonderland

                                     Overnight a frosty world     


  
                                                                                       Tree Bones

                                                  Jack Frosting





            Temps today over freezing! Darned near balmy…possible rain forecast as well.                            

(

When Winter first begins to bite
and stones crack in the frosty night
when pools are black and trees are bare
'tis evil in the wild to fare...
J.R.R.Tolkien

                                       Yuletide Blessing from Our Lady of the Cold Shoulders






The Tomten has got his goat and it's hot cocoa time….

                         True Tale of the Norwegian Tunkall — Strange Familiars
                                  https://www.strangefamiliars.com/home/the-tunkall

Timothy interviews Ingrid about her encounters with the gnome-like Tunkall spirits in Norway. Ingrid also discusses ghosts, will-o-the-wisps, and other entities from Norwegian folklore.



Wilde, wild winter ❄️ ❄️❄️


Green Man in holly and ivy




                                            Lotus’s house

                   Lotus’s 🦶 bare snowy feet ❄️❄️❄️ Among bird and cat tracks


                                                Wild men and women of ❄️ Winter ❄️ 


                   Of course, no holiday is complete without a bit of family fun…Dropkick Murphys style.



                                                         The Season’s Upon Us



Monday, November 14, 2022

Wheel of the Year

                                       The green of Summer and Spring…


                                     Soon Autumn’s harvests bring

                    


                                                 


    
                                                            The  Wheel Spins Round Again….
To find the Cold Turkeys of Winter





                                                          Rose Hips Sweet from Jack Frost’s Nip
                                                       Icicles form on cabin’s roof
           
                                                                Tomtens are out wandering about
                                                        Snow hit again, but it comes and goes…

                                          
                                    In between snows it’s sunny and chill.
                                     Tracks: deer, turkey, dog, tomten….

 

           

                                         Winter in the North Country




and back around to Spring: white blossoms from blooming fruit trees scatter on ground like snow...


 


        Pussy willows against a clear cobalt sky.

                       Columnar Basalt ~ a favorite den of marmots. 

      Giant basalt monoliths are omnipresent in Spokane area. The Columbia Basin has the largest basalt flow in the world. Pumice stone abounds also, speaking of a very volcanic past.

Days of Future/Past, or what comes around, goes around. Cyclic in nature, is nature herself.

Graham Hancock's Preconceptions Are Blinkers statement seems very true in light of more recent discoveries. "American archaeology was so riddled with pre-formed opinions on how the past should look, that it repeatedly missed, sidelined and downright ignored evidence for any human presence at all prior to Clovis, until the mass of evidence became so overwhelming it took the existing paradigm by storm."

Graham Hancock, America Before

"We thus find ourselves in a place now where "Clovis First" can quite definitely be ruled out, despite the the fading protests of a very few zealots still clinging on to that discredited fantasy."

Thank you, Mr. Hancock!

Palaeontologist Tom Demere of San Diego's Natural History Museum refers to evidence from the Cerutti Mastodon Site indicating human presence in North America 130,000 years ago. 

What is especially intriguing is based upon new evidence linking the genome-wide data to findings which show that some Amazonian native people descend partly from a Native American founding population that carried ancestry more closely related to indigenous Australians, New Guineans and Andaman Islanders than present day Eurasians or Native Americans.

A whole new light on the New World.