Saturday, December 30, 2023

Back Trails and Buttons

 On Friday, I strapped up my toe, my ankle, and leaving my knee to fend for itself, set off for a short hike. Up on the Skyline Drive, it was quiet and cold. There were few people about, even the lookouts were empty of visitors, a shame,  as the views were magnificent.






I spotted a grassy lay by, with a trail heading up onto the mountain, so parked up, grabbed my backpack and poles, and began walking. The air was crisp and quiet. I heard a couple of cars pass on the road behind me, but as I climbed, the traffic sounds faded away, and silence surrounded me. At the top of the trail, a marker told me I was now on the Appalachian Trail, and could go left or right. I went left, stopping to admire the spectacular vistas.






I was now walking along the top of the mountain, where the trees are short and stubby, due to them being exposed to the elements, including heavy winds. But today, there was no wind, just fresh, chilly air punctuated occasionally with a few crow cries and the chatter of squirrels, angry at  having their peace and quiet disturbed by a human. Yet, despite dealing with adverse conditions, nature is thriving up here. Bright green lichens cover the trees and rocks, with glorious clumps of emerald mosses. Shelf fungi clung to fallen trunks and the autumn leaves shimmered on the ground in the winter sunshine. I looked for lions mane mushrooms, a fluffy, tendriled mushroom, on the trees, but there were none of their host trees up here on the exposed ridge line.




I walked 2 miles along the AT, the trail descending down the side of the mountain, crossing the Skyline Drive, and then climbing back up again, then down and up some more before I decided to stop. I sat on some huge rocks to drink water, and chewed a Cliff bar with an expiration date of September 2022. It didn’t taste any different from what I remembered, and I wasn’t sure if that was a good thing or not. I gave myself a scare while I sat munching, as ahead of me, among the bare tree trunks, I saw a large black shape, and thought it was a bear that had got a whiff of my peanut bar. But after some scrutinizing and moving from side to side, I realized it was an uprooted tree, its bare root base facing me with black earth still clinging and hanging in clods.  But I hurriedly finished my snack and began the walk back.






Along a more sheltered part of the trail, there were large clumps of mountain laurel, their dark green, shiny leaves encroaching over the trail, beginning to form a tunnel. This will be a pretty spot in early spring when their white and pink flowers bloom. On the way up, I had noticed the path was covered with acorns. Called a mast year, when trees put out a bigger crop of seeds than usual, this is also a sign of a severe winter approaching, according to folklore and the Farmer’s Almanac. On the way back I stopped and picked up several handfuls, stuffing them in my backpack, for the squirrels and blue jays at home.



Heading home, I stopped at one of the lookouts, the Blue Ridge Mountains looking somber under the heavy winter sky. I felt a few drops of rain, and was glad to be warm and dry in Stanley as I drove back to The Blue House..

I had decided to get crafty on Thursday evening. I have a rose colored lampshade on a vintage lamp stand, given to me by friends many years ago. I used to like the lampshade, but have discovered it’s one commonly seen, so now I dislike it, as I prefer to be different. I pulled off the fabric, and decided to create something original.


Over 30 years ago, I bought an old gramophone cabinet, which, inside, had some old sewing bits and pieces, scissors, fabric tape measure, wooden reels of cotton, needle cases, other odds and ends, including a tub of vintage buttons. Moving from England, I parted with the cabinet, but kept the contents, as I was using them, and the buttons went into some ancient Balls canning jars for decoration. I tipped them out onto the dining room table, and with wire, started to recover the lampshade frame with old buttons.





It was going well, but after a while, my fingers were getting sore from the tugging and pulling on the wire. I did some more after my hike, and then finished it on Saturday morning. I had worried that I would run out of buttons, I used about 350, but I had plenty, and some still left over. So now, I have a lampshade unlike anyone else, and my vintage buttons are on display, instead of hidden in a jar. I’m content with that.