Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Starting to feel like late summer

The blackbirds are amassing in a young ash woods along Schwartz Road tonight seeking protection from predators. There's safety in numbers, and in a mostly agricultural landscape, redwinged blackbirds, common grackles, brown-headed cowbirds, and European starlings are leaving behind brome grass seeds in the recently mown hayfield across the road for their nightly protective cover. They're really noisy and I wonder if they are communicating or if they are naturally loud in close quarters with other birds.

It's a beautiful evening tonight. The air is dry and the sun is setting orange, partly hidden behind steel grey clounds. Riding along at 15 mph feels effortless and the air rushing past my ears gives me a slight sensation of flight that those blackbirds probably take for granted.

Two days ago I took a ride from my home near Cedarville to the Rivergreenway at Johnny Appleseed Park. Riding south on the Greenway, I headed into downtown, then east on the Maumee Greenway into New Haven. Here's a photo of the Maumee Greenway as it passes through a young floodplain forest. Composed of green ash, boxedler, cottonwood, silver maple, and sycamore, this is a young and very fast growing woodland. In the 10 years or so that I have been traveling this path, these trees have grown rapidly from the seedlings and small saplings I can barely remember.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Ride down Schwartz Road

A view of the Cedarville Reservoir near Leo, IN. The reservoir dam was constructed in 1956 to help regulate water flow in the St. Joe River so that the city of Fort Wayne can obtain a steady supply of water throughout the sometimes dry summer months.

Water quality is important to City of Fort Wayne Utilities. The city works with the St. Joseph River Watershed Initiative to collect and test weekly water samples and share that information with people throughout the entire watershed.
www.sjrwi.org



Sun sets over an Amish farm near Leo, IN. Descendants of immigrants originally from Alsace, France, this Old-Order Amish settlement co-exists with modern American life. These hardy folks face development pressure from urban development in the Fort Wayne area.

Zook, Noah and Samuel L. Yoder. "Grabill-New Haven, Indiana, Old Order Amish Settlement." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1987. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 05 August 2008



Saturday, August 2, 2008


Rode to Woodburn, IN & back this morning. Beautiful morning to ride - clear blue skies, very light and cool north wind, dry air. Stopped and took this photo of the Maumee River at Platter Road Bridge, looking downstream as the river heads northeast toward Lake Erie.