Tag: Catoctin Mountain Park

A Mixed Media Nature Journal

A Mixed Media Nature Journal

Catoctin Mountain Park Nature Journal In September 2015 I was privileged to be selected as a National Park Service Artist in Residence at Catoctin Mountain Park in Maryland.  During my stay I painted, sketched, wrote and created two journals trying some new techniques in mixed […]

Words from the Woods – Time to Leave

Words from the Woods – Time to Leave

Sunday, September 20 Wow, that two weeks went by quickly.  Today I leave Cabin 16 and Catoctin Mountain Park.     This morning as I reflect on the last two weeks here, I remember the people, creatures, and landscape that made the experience so meaningful. […]

Words from the Woods – A Golden Morning

Words from the Woods – A Golden Morning

Saturday, September 19, 2015

I hear so many different birds this morning – Maybe they flew in for the weekend.

This is my favorite time to sit outside at the picnic table.  The light is soft and the Catoctin Mountains slowly awaken.

Sunlight glints off finely woven webs

Strung between branches, they glow like tiny laser beams.

Acorns hit the ground as squirrels start to work

Woodpeckers knock about looking for breakfast.

This morning a breeze brushes across this mountain.  It sounds like the very beginning of a gentle rain, but this rain brings a quiet shower of gold as the tulip tree leaves fall.

Today is my last full day here and  I want to appreciate each moment.  It has been a luxury to be surrounded by my art supplies AND the beauty of the forest and be able to make the most of each without a busy schedule to interrupt me.  For this incredible opportunity, I am very grateful.

My time here has been a perfect mix of my favorite things – nature, drawing, writing, and introducing others to the joys of nature journaling.

Later –

DSCN0807

Much later, actually, about 1am.  I have finished binding my altered book nature journal – the final step in this fun project.  I did a cross-stitch binding that I saw on YouTube to sew the signatures (groups of pages) into the cover.

 

I used many different papers, collected here and there, and added my favorite ephemera to give it some personality.  Here are some of the pages:

My last post from Cabin 16 will be tomorrow.

 

DSCN0810

DSCN0776

DSCN0811

Words from the Woods – Beauty All Around

Words from the Woods – Beauty All Around

Thursday, September 17, 2015 Good Morning, Catoctin! Being an artist and writer, I love noticing details.  Even after sitting at my picnic table studio each day for almost two weeks, I continue to see new things.  This is an important lesson – give everyday life […]

Words from the Woods – Trying Something New

Words from the Woods – Trying Something New

Wednesday, September 16, 2015 This morning drove down to the library to finish and post blogs. I am trying hard to update the blog every few days, though sometimes I don’t want to leave camp. I do enjoy writing about this wonderful experience and want […]

Words from the Woods – On Visiting, Hiking, and Messing with the Food Web

Words from the Woods – On Visiting, Hiking, and Messing with the Food Web

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

My husband Clay visited today. We hiked to Chimney Rock, a steady uphill and very rocky trail.

DSCN0721

I added a couple of trees to my tree ID list – Sweet Birch and Loblolly Pine.

More outdoor artwork late afternoon.

Now, because I feel this Artist-in-Residence experience in the mountains has been a very enlightening one, I will now come clean about something, a confession of sorts.

As an environment educator, I have explained the intricacies and importance of food chains and food webs to hundreds of students. I always stress the significance of each species and that when one is taken out the entire system suffers. This often takes the form of yarn strung between students, the collapsing species dropping his yarn and sitting down. After writing earlier about identifying species of this and that, this morning I killed a BIG spider in my cabin. As interested as I am in creatures, I cannot even bring myself to look at the you-know-what section in my National Wildllife Association Guide to Insects and Spiders. Moths, beetles, even wasps (they enter the picture in a minute), but NO SPIDERS. After I took out the first guy, the official arachnid recon mission showed up. Two more that looked just like the victim. They looked threatening, so I introduced them to my flip flop. In a matter of murderous seconds, I had messed up the local food chain. However (and herein may come my redemption) earlier this week I did save two exotic-looking wasps. Neither seemed aggressive (obviously I recognize animal aggression) – the first crawling around near the cabin door and the other struggling to move on the kitchen floor with a clump of fuzz hanging on his leg. With both of these wee creatures, I used the time tested method of setting a plastic cup on top of the invader (wasp) and then sliding a piece of paper under the cup, allowing the good Samaritan (me) to transport and release outside. Wow, does writing so many words about this indicate that I may have been away from home a bit too long?

Let me move forward with something poetic.

In the Gloaming

Sunset comes early up on the mountain

Rays coax the late shift to begin early in this arboreal workplace.

Jays and woodpeckers clock out

Crickets and katydids announce their attendance

Moths slip in quietly.

Bees gather a little bedtime snack from the last goldenrod of the season.

Later

I had to do laundry tonight, having missed the last two nights. This resulted in the cabin looking like some kind of outdoor outfitter preschool, filled with crazy sock and underwear mobiles!

Time for sleep. No telling what adventures tomorrow may bring.

 

 

 

 

Words from the Woods – Meet My Neighbors

Words from the Woods – Meet My Neighbors

Monday, September 14, 2015 Absolutely glorious morning as the woods come to life. I have much I want to accomplish today. Worked at the picnic table – relaxing and wonderful, inspiring. Did a leaf painting for the Catoctin Forest Alliance journal (See photo of Alliance/Catoctin […]

Words from the Woods – Autumn Arrives

Words from the Woods – Autumn Arrives

Friday, September 11, 2015 Autumn has arrived here in Catoctin Mountain Park.  Yesterday’s rains have cooled the forest down and that might have been the topic of conversation as the Pileated Woodpeckers got going this morning. Last evening’s program at the Thurmont Regional Library found […]

Words from the Woods – My First Few Days

Words from the Woods – My First Few Days

 

Sunday September 6

I arrived this afternoon, greeted by a resident woodchuck, and settled into cabin 16 (former camp infirmary) in Misty Mount Campground. The chestnut log cabins, beautifully hewn and chinked were originally built by the Works Progress Administration in 1937, using local materials and providing jobs. During World War II, Misty Mount

offered a peaceful refuge for soldiers on R&R. What a wonderful legacy. The cabins still look much the same, but Cabin 16 now has electricity and running water, thanks to a refurbishment in 2014 by local Amish craftsmen. Quite pleased with myself after settling in, I thought of some of the pioneers in my book and their letters home after setting up their new homesteads.

I went on a short hike after dinner to the area where workers used to make charcoal for the Catoctin Furnace. Leaves here are just beginning to turn, others float down as I walk through the late afternoon woods.

Forest floor footfalls

Crackle under muddy boots

Announce my presence.

 

Monday, September 7 (Labor Day)

I had my first public Nature Journaling program this morning, with 15 visitors sitting in the woods sketching and writing.   Visitors have a choice between starting their own nature journal or creating a page for the Catoctin Mountain Park Nature Journal that I will add to and donate to the park. With the seven pages contributed today, the journal is already taking shape.

For dinner, I lit the Coleman stove and, trying to capture a childhood camping memory, opened a can of Chef Boyardee ravioli. I should have left it the pleasant memory that it was. This anticipated re-creation did not meet expectations but I did have my applesauce and a couple of leftover Mint Milano cookies to ease the disappointment.

As I sit in my cot tonight, I listen to a cacophony of nocturnal creatures. I am learning the sights, sounds, and character of Cabin 16.

 

Tuesday, September 8

My day began with a hike to Cunningham Falls, a little over two miles round trip. My wicking tee shirt cannot work fast enough on this warm, humid morning. A boardwalk bench facing the waterfall offers shady respite where I eat my sandwich, warm and oozing strawberry jelly and peanut butter, having been squished between my sketchbook and water bottle. Pb&j is my favorite hike lunch-tastes good no matter what condition it is in

Taking in the trees, massive boulders, and water, I attempt to translate the scene to paper.

The forest is full of so many textures, colors, and Fortunate are the creatures in this habitat, falling asleep to the sound of the waterfall lullaby.

Early autumn

Leaf leaders emerge

Letting go, gracefully spiraling

In a golden orange dance,

Landing softly in the comfort

Of Mother Nature’s Lap.

 

I hear children’s voices and look up to see two young mothers who have left the trail on the other side of the creek (despite warning signage) with four kids and a dog (more signs – “Dogs not permitted in the park”) to walk down on the rocks. They become quite perplexed when they try to pick up the trail on this side of the creek, only to realize that the trails are fenced off to prevent, well, you know, people from climbing on the rocks. From their voices, I gather they have found a way up to the road. Many visitors have sustained injuries on these rocks. When crossing the creek, they also cross the boundary between Cunningham Falls State Park and the National Park Service Catoctin Mountain Park. Paths do not connect the two.

(When I related this incident to a ranger later, she told me that many people cross the creek and continue on to the National Park Visitor Center. Realizing how tired they are, then ask the park rangers for a ride back to their car at the state park, not an available service. In doing so, admitting that yes, they ignored the many warnings and did indeed, cross the creek.)

Later this afternoon, I worked on a hand-bound journal in my outdoor studio (picnic table). Surrounded by the woods and my art supplies-lucky me.

 

Wednesday, September 9

Awoke to the sound of Pileated Woodpeckers (think Woody Woodpecker) catching up on forest news. Then the blue jays joined in. Later things quiet down and after granola and yogurt, I start back to my journal project. My husband is coming today to check out my forest digs and deliver some items that I left behind, including more dusters for the spider webs.

Set up my workspace outside to work on my own journal, an altered book using lots of different papers that I will resew into an old Bobsey Twins binding that was falling apart.

Clay arrived in time for lunch (he is a huge fan of peanut butter and jelly) and we shared a relaxing afternoon, followed by a trip down to town for dinner.

Later, as I lay in bed, I heard a red fox screaming. This can be a startling sound if one has not heard it before, as it resembles a woman screaming. Soon the fox quieted and the crickets, katydids, and other nighttime creatures joined in. After these first few days, I now find this evening symphony (with the exception of the screaming fox) melodic and comforting.

 

Thursday, September 10

No morning hike today as it is raining quite hard. It has been very dry here, so the rain is welcome and provides a day to write, with a cool, fresh breeze coming through my cabin windows and the falling rain as background music. Later today I am doing a program at the Thurmont library, a beautiful building with a covered back deck/boardwalk that extends out into a wetlands.

Worked this morning on the journal project that I will leave with the Catoctin Forest Alliance, sponsor of this Artist-in-Residence program. I am challenging myself to use some new techniques including bleach printing and gelatin printing. Journal pages will be mixed media with fabric, handmade paper, modeling paste, vintage book pages, and more. I love this stuff. Photos will follow.

Later – I just realized that the heavy rain has brought water trickling down one log wall in my cabin. Will walk down and tell the ranger when the rain lets up a bit.

4pm – At the Thurmont Library. Just finished this blog, but no time to post as I need to set up for my program. This library has a large covered deck that extends out into a wetland area. Beautiful setting for a nature journaling program.  Will post tomorrow.

Thanks for reading!

 

Words from the Woods:  My Artist-in-Residence Program Begins

Words from the Woods: My Artist-in-Residence Program Begins

  The Adventure Begins Today I begin my Artist-in-Residence program at Catoctin Mountain Park in Thurmont, Maryland. I am hoping to blog about the experience – the people I meet, the natural world I encounter, and what I create while I am there.  Here is […]