Cycles and Seasons (continued)
The Rising of the Sun and the Running of the Deer: A Glacier Year
As if to make up for the days-long darkness of this
last blizzard, the peaks today wear snow plumeslong, graceful
trails of white, curving up into an ice-blue sky. Yesterday the snow-mad
wind raced through the forest. Today the motionless trees are cloaked in
heavy, glistening robes, the leafless aspen and young larch bent
down.
Moderate snowfall helps many plants and animals
survive the winter. For ground dwellers it provides insulation from the
wildly fluctuating winter temperatures encountered east of the Divide,
protecting the hibernators and providing cover for the many small
mammals that remain active during the winter. Wind-swept ground freezes
deep; but under a mantle of snow life-sustaining heat is trapped,
permitting many animals to survive and allowing the work of decomposers
to continue.
But this has been a winter of too much snow and too
many temperature extremes. The heavy snowpack has forced the
sharp-hoofed deer to yard up in great numbers; unable to range freely in
deep snow, they are forced into smaller and smaller confines where their
numbers allow them to break and maintain trails. But in time they
exhaust the food supply. Younger deer, unable to reach the increasingly
higher browse line, starve first. Then the does, heavy with unborn
fawns, grow weak and fall to predators. So the imprisoned herds dwindle
quickly this year, sometimes less than a kilometer from plentiful
browse.
Deep snow is also death for many seed-eating birds.
As they are unable to scratch for food, their body furnaces quickly
fail, and during a night of cold wind their fluffed corpses drop into
the snow.
Exposed to the noon sun, the snow surface thaws; when
refrozen, it is restructured to crystalline ice. If snow repeatedly
thaws and freezes, an ice barrier is formed, shutting off vital air
exchange. Plants are then subject to rot, and micro-animal life is
smothered. Travel beneath the snow is made more difficult for mice and
shrews and they are deprived of food and cover. Under such conditions
their numbers rapidly decline.
But while many starve in a winter of deep snow,
others benefit. The exposed traffic of small mammals is to the owl's
advantage. Foxes and coyotes more easily run down rabbits and hares on
crusted snow. Deer and, to a lesser extent, wapiti and moosetheir
hoofs punching through the snowpackswiftly tire in deep snow and
become helpless before cougar or wolf, whose lighter weight is supported
by the crust.
Grim as this winter's toll becomes, enough will
survive to begin the process of renewal in spring. Last winter, a season
of light snow, was a time of hardship for predators. The deer remained
strong, the wapiti remote on high, windswept ridges, and the small
mammals hidden.
Only the water ouzel, winter after winter, seems not
to notice the hardships of the season. Lord of his small world of open
water, he sings in February, wading and swimming his diminished stream
to find a never-failing supply of water insects and small fish. It is a
voice of springglad, wild, continual as the moving wateran
incongruous song in this winter-shrouded land.
But with the growing stature of the sun, the grip of
winter softens. The firs and spruce send their loads of snow sliding to
the ground. Streams begin to sing again and soon the lakes increase, the
booming of splitting ice breaking the silence of the valleys. Avalanches
thunder down the steeper slopes, carrying trees to the swollen streams.
Rivers hiss and rage, speeding the debris along. A spring that comes too
suddenly will bring flood to lower elevations.
Snow geese thread through the valleys, and ground
squirrels tunnel up through snow to find invasions of birds returning
from the south. Soon the three-petaled wakerobins appear, chasing the
snowline up the ridges. Glacier lilies and Calypso orchids are next, and
with the shooting stars spring arrives.
The melting snow releases a new group of animals to
populate the winter-thinned land. Up come chipmunks. Bears reappear.
Young red squirrels, helpless and blind, squirm in their nest holes.
Hidden dens rustle with pups and kits. Soon warm days will bring them
out and the business of learning to cope with their world will
begin.
All life responds irresistibly to the growing
strength of the Sun. Cottonwood, willow, and maple come into flower and
unfold new leaves; green needle clusters spot the limbs of larches that
in winter had seemed lifeless snags among the other conifers. Beneath
the soil of prairie, meadow, and forest, in the mud of lakes and ponds,
other life stirs; armies of insects, spiders, crustaceans, amphibians,
and fish will strive to complete their life cycles against the
formidable odds of a predatory world.
Spring reaches higher up the mountains, the lowlands
passing into summer. Wapiti and mountain sheep follow the rising tide of
succulent browse up to the high meadows. In forest, grove, and meadow
and along the stream new fledglings appearthrush, vireo,
hummingbird, waxwing, harlequin duck, bluebird, osprey, and
flickeras holes, nests, and cavities brim with begging mouths.
In the alpine meadows, where snow overlaps the spring
and winter follows hard behind the summer, the growing season is short
and the climate unstable. Sensing the stronger light, flowers push up
impatiently through the snow and hasten into bloom. Pikas and marmots
scurry and sunbathe among the rocks of scree slopes.
Summer matures in ripening huckleberries, and the
bears that grazed the spring grasses now gorge themselves fat. Dry days
of August bring probing lightning, threatening the forests with
fire.
Sweeps of beargrass reach their climax now in the
highest meadows. In dizzy succession wildflowers set seed. Fat and
sluggish, marmots and ground squirrels disappear beneath the rocks. The
golden eagle must search longer each day to find prey within its vast
domain.
Autumn lingers in the valleys and on the flanks of
low ridges. The morning sun glints on hoarfrost, firing the yellow
leaves of larch, aspen, birch, maple, and cottonwood, and shines on the
blood-red berries of mountain-ash. Soon a night of killing frost will
bring down the corpses of insects and spiders by the millions. The
reptiles and amphibians, being cold-blooded animals, seem out of place
in this long-wintered land. Unable to maintain body temperatures
appreciably above their surroundings, they are the first to seek the
protection of hibernation, collecting in dens or burying themselves
beneath the ooze of pond bottoms.
Songbirds gather and leave the valleys. The harsh
cries of jays sound ominous now in the forest. Only the chickadees seem
to ignore the long tree shadows; their ceaseless conversations carry
through the leafless underbrush as they busily search for seed.
Velvet has gone to bone, and in these final noon-warm
days the rut runs through the land. It begins in the valleys in
September with the joustings of deer and moose and the buglings of bull
wapiti puncturing the forest silence. By November the higher meadows
ring with the collisions of bighorn rams who compete for ewes by
smashing together their massive, curled horns. On high slopes mountain
goat billies posture and swagger; head to tail, they circle, threatening
each other with dagger-like horns.
From Flathead Lake, 100 stream kilometers to the
south, kokanee salmon return to spawn in the clear, cold shallows of
McDonald Creek. Gathering bald eagles surround the stream, again and
again lifting vulnerable fish from pool and riffle. Perched by the
hundreds along the stream course, their white heads and tails glistening
against the dark trees, they stand out like lanterns strung for a
banquet.
Now the stinging wind comes down from the peaks and
shuts the lakes. Life slows or sleeps. Ptarmigan, snowshoe hare, and
longtail weasel, all wearing winter white, seek shelter and food in a
silent land where spring and yellow lilies seem forever lost.
All life faces one ultimate challenge: to survive or
not, to reproduce or fail, to bring one's kind to tomorrow's sun or
vanish forever. This land is harsh. To survive in nature demands skill
in the individual, excellence in the species, and a chance from the
environment.
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