Monthly Archives: December 2008

Gray Day Fun

So what can you do on a dreary gray winter day? Why, you can have some fun hiking on the Little Red Schoolhouse grounds, of course! Don’t let a bunch of clouds steal your fun away. Look at how beautiful it is….

….even without the sun! Boy, I can’t resist a path. What’s around that corner? Oh, I’ll just go for a little bit….

Ooooo, it’s a frozen pond, all shiny and glassy. In this area a chickadee made his presents known with a “chick-a-dee-dee-dee, chick-a-dee-dee-dee” call.

Walking back towards the schoolhouse, this is what it looked like….

Can you see the Little Red Schoolhouse at the end of the trail? It’s the prize at the end of our trip. The grounds are still under construction, but the schoolhouse is open for dedicated nature lovers.

For nature lovers and three wise guys, that is. Inside the schoolhouse, Curly and Larry are on the look out for Moe to make his escape!

Christmas Lamp Sketch

Yesterday I went to the LaGrange Art Gallery. Downtown LaGrange is decorated so beautifully this time of year. I just love it. They have these cute old fashioned lamp posts every few feet down every block. I just couldn’t resist sketching one!

Fresh pine garland is such an elegant way to decorate and the scent can’t be beat. Just for the smell of it, I always buy a fresh pine wreath every year.

Evergreens are used this time of year to symbolize everlasting life, since the evergreen is a conifer and does not loose it’s leaves (needles) in the winter. It is forever green. This same principle is attributed to Christ, who came on Christmas to give us everlasting life, even after our life here on Earth is done.

Elegant and beautiful.

Yesterday’s sketch was done with Winsor & Newton travel watercolors and a Micron pen. D= date, T= time, C= weather conditions, and A= area or location of subject.

Stormy Night Snow Sketch

Oh how I love a winter storm at night! To hear the hollowing wind and watch the flurries take a horizontal path…brings much joy.

Today it rained for the majority of the day. I woke up to rain banging at my window. On my way home from work, it changed into freezing rain and by evening snow! This storm wasn’t big and didn’t last for a long time, but at one point this is what I saw:

The wind picked up and let out a big “shhhhhhh“. Snow flew from left to right in a straight direction. Branches bend with the wind and snow collected on the north side of the trunk and twigs.

A nightly storm can bring peace and humility. How fragile we are compared to the forces of nature. I think of all of the caterpillars that are in an anti-freeze state of hibernation. Some might be under that bark right now? I couldn’t do that. I wouldn’t make it a few hours unprotected. That humbles me.

Today’s sketchbook page was done with Derwent’s Inktense Watersoluble Ink Pencils and a Micron pen.

Glorious Gall

Look what I found!!!

Do you know what that is? It’s a gigantic gall!
It’s so big, it can be referred to as a knot or tumor gall. You may have spotted galls, especially this time of year when the leaves have cleared and tree twigs are exposed. You may have seen galls on leaves too. Look on the ground when you take your nature hikes, I bet you’ll find some on oak leaves without even trying too hard.

Here is a close up:

Isn’t it beautiful? I mean, for real? I love galls.
What is a gall in the plant world?
Typical galls are the result of insects depositing their egg inside a plant’s tissue. You may now ask…”Why do you love that so much? That sounds like plant damage!”   Oh but no!
That’s why I love galls so much. The insect gets his way and the plant gets her way.

Here’s what happens:
An insect deposits an egg by making a slit in a leaf or bud of a twig. The secretion (eeew!) from the insect that surrounds the egg, causes the plant’s cells to reproduce really quickly and abundantly. The plant cells start growing around the egg to protect it. Hence the excess plant tissue and really interesting looking galls. No harm done. The only damage done is a little disfigurement, which in my opinion is not a bad trait at all but rather a positive one in which I love you even more!
PS The oak tree gall in the picture is so massive it could have been produced by fungi, insects, or/and mechanical injury.

And how did I learn all of this? I’ll show you:

Why it’s my own 1961 copy of, “Some Plant Galls of Illinois”, by Glen S. Winterringer! Sold back in the day for .25 cents, I grabbed it for $1. OH BOY! What more can a girl want than a book about plant galls…I really don’t know?

The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne, is going to give this book to you for free as a Christmas present, by clicking here and clicking on the PDF file. How do you like them apples in a recession?

Have fun my nature friends! Pass it on!