Tuesday, 7 November 2017

Spring Thaw at Lake Bernard

Usually the road was plowed to the corner of Sawmill Bay. Here we would park with two or three other cars along the road edge adjacent the now graying, gritty and decomposing snow banks left by the plow.

The lake ahead still stood frozen, apparently unmoving in the half-light of the overcast day, but in the background, there was the constant deep throated cracking and humanlike groaning of the shifting ice. The snow at the road edge was mixed with dirt, grass and debris scraped and deposited there by the plow. The residual snow that was left just behind these plow ridges, added little contrast to the smattering of exposed earth matted with decayed limp grasses, exposed stones, and assorted weed stalks that abounded in this strip. Most of the snow had by now receded into the protection of the cover of the forest. The private roadway that backed our cottages was still mostly covered in snow, shaded by the overhang of evergreens and mature hardwoods. A single-track heading south lay exposed on the snow covered  road surface, following the unseen natural curve of the tire ruts cut into the road bed underneath.

There was nothing but an eerie silence, disturbed only by the sound of the westerly driven winds, whistling ominously thorough the bony upturned fingerlike branches of the maple, oak, birch and poplar standing among the evergreens. As one listened intently, the sound of their stout trunks creaking, and cracking could be detected mixed deeply in the sound of the relentless March winds.

The three of us gathered our packs, gear and shovels, locked the car doors, stepped in turn over the snow bank, and headed along the single track into the overhang of trees along the private roadbed to the south. The going was good, the road surface still firm underneath our feet. The pathway climbed the first hill parallel to the McLelland’s place. As we trudged along, each lost in our own thoughts, I looked over and reflected about how lonely and empty it seemed without the warmth of summer, barking dogs, and the life brought by the presence of cottagers there for the good times. Its bleakness actually gave me a chill. Instinctively, I drew the collar my canvass jacket tightly around my neck and turned my attention back to the pathway and the way ahead. In the protection of the rising hillside, the winds dwindled to a whisper of their former might. All that disturbed the stillness in this place was the distinctive crunch of our boots against the now crusty snow on the road surface and the steady thumping of fabric brushing against fabric as we moved steadily along.

We now started down the backside of the first ridge onto a level piece of roadway that
bridged the entrance road to our cottage with that of our neighbor Gordon Blisssett. Here again the wind picked up. Along our left the trees stood unmoving, dutifully lined behind the old rusting fence of wire and rotting cedar that bordered the roadway. To the right, the trees gradually thinned into a flat area leading to the back of Gordon’s cabin. His large oval stained and varnished pine slab, “Blissett’s” sign, moved rhythmically creaking against the confines of the rusted chains that carried its weight, driven constantly by gusts of raw wind.  There were no signs of life or recent intrusions evident in the snow here. Gordon had not been here yet this year. We passed quietly still unspeaking.

We reached our road. Our small unassuming sign hung silently above and to the left of the gate at the entrance declaring “Doane Heggtveit”, its ragged face and edges unmoving in the still air. The road here rose steeply behind the gate toward the lake, hiding everything, but the forest, from view. The gate was imbedded in about a foot of crusty snow, it could not be moved. The snow was significantly deeper here, protected from direct daylight by the slope of the hill. We waded carefully into the deep snow sinking right up to the crotch of our jeans as we approached it, and then one at a time we each crossed over the gate. This was accomplished by placing our right foot first onto one of the exposed metal strands that formed the base of one of the squares that ran vertically and horizontally across gate surface above the snow line. We then each grabbed the gate’s top rail for stability and lifting ourselves up, turned and placed the other leg over the top into a similar square on the backside. Individually we crossed over, and then stepping down into the snow bed on the backside of the hill we each waited until all of us were standing in the deep snow on the other side.

Once all our supplies had been passed across and we had all crossed the gate, we continued our trip. Here we were made our way more slowly, following each other’s awkward cavernous steps, through deep drifts of the undisturbed rotting snow. It was still deep here, as it lay protected by the dense cover of the surrounding forest compounded by the lack of direct sunlight. Step by step, and in single file, we made our way slowly to the top.

Under its surface the snow was actually layered, created by period temperature swings over the winter season, first thawing, then freezing up again and finally adding more snow cover. When one of us first stepped into its surface, snow’s first strong sub-layer would hold us for a moment or maybe two, then suddenly it would give way, dropping us; buried to the hip. We were therefore forced to stop periodically to wait, to help one another, as one or the other of us fell prostate and then struggled to regain our footing.

We finally reached the top of the hill. Surprisingly there was no snow here; the crest received the full warmth and benefit of the spring sunlight in spite of the steady westerly winds. The tufted grasses and emerald moss here, mixed with rock, lay exposed and actually showed signs of fresh new growth. The prevailing wind rejoined us head on as we moved over the crest of the hill causing each of us to draw our clothing tighter to us.

There she sat, the cottage, quiet and indifferent in the dull gray of the overcast skies above and the corresponding hard lake surface beyond. Long and low, her dark green paint shadowing the snow shoveled off the roof to the walkway along her back. To the right, the grass and pathways in front of the tool shed, cabin and woodshed lay completely exposed; the snow had retreated some time ago from the entire hillside back into the shadows of the evergreens. The clothes line to the left danced in the direct path of the wind off the lake.
We rested a moment, taking it all in. The ominous silence of this time of year, still broken by the wind and the creaking of the trees had always struck me as irreconcilable with my image of the lake. My mind always locked on an image of deep blue waters, with flashes of sunlight glistening and dancing among the waves, the matching sky would hold only a few puffs of lazy white cloud making their way slowly to the horizon beyond and the drifting vapor trails of long since passed aircraft. I saw the woods and land surrounding the cottage, alive with the movement of dark green leaves and grasses orchestrated by warm summer breezes. Birds swooped, twittered and sang, while butterflies, dragonflies, bees, wasps, hornets, mosquitoes, flies and honeybees buzzed and danced through the open spaces. I completed this picture bringing it to life filling the air with the sound of laughter and shouts of children playing uncaringly along the dancing water’s edge.

We unpacked our shovels and began the tedious task of clearing the snow away from the back-shed door and the path to the tool shed. This took only about five minutes with all three of us working at it. Soon the lock was off the back-shed screen door and the inner solid door pushed back. Darkness and the musty smell of mice and mould mixed with cold unmoving air greeting our senses. I had Reid lift and prop up one of the outside plywood flaps that covered the screens, letting natural light into the cavernous interior of the back shed. I stepped inside and instinctively stamped the excess snow from my pant legs and boots. I reached up and unlocked the second door, placed the padlock on the sill to the right and pushed down hard on the old latch. I placed my shoulder against the door and shoved, it gave and opened into the darkened kitchen. Here the air smelled stale, a different smell, there was a hint of decaying food and the musty scent of unused bedding.

Somehow it seemed colder here in the darkness of the enclosed kitchen. I edged slowly forward, one foot ahead of the other, further into the shadows temporarily blinded by the sudden absence of light, past the wood stove with its white sides ghostlike in the half- light of the reflected overcast day. Once I had made it past the stove I carefully felt my way gingerly toward the left-hand wall behind the kitchen counter, the home of the main breaker for the cottage lights. As soon as I arrived at the edge of the counter, I carefully removed my gloves. Running my hands across the cold pattern of the tongue and groove pine surface, I used my fingers to grope in the darkness for the panel and the switch box adjacent. I quickly found the corner of the main panel and then knowingly moved my hand to the right. My fingers brushed across the exposed Bakelite breaker switch and the icy surface of its metal housing box underneath. Feeling this switch, I immediately leaned forward and gave the main part of the switch a hard push. It slowly gave and then suddenly clicked into place, but nothing happened. It was still dark; the only light visible was the smallest hint of light peeking through the top edge of the twin shutters on the large window overlooking the lake. My eyes were now becoming accustomed to the darkness. I turned back toward the doorway to the shed and reached forward for the light switch to the right of the entrance barely visible in the dimness. The steam from my breath rose and hung like a small cloud in the cold-trapped air of the cottage interior, obscuring momentarily my view of the doorway and my friend standing framed by the light beyond. I lifted the switch and the room dazzled with light.

I asked Reid to open the shutters at the side of the cottage and on the deck by the lake. He turned on his heels and headed outside followed by Terry who was much too short to reach the window at the side.

As I looked around the kitchen I could see the usual telltale signs of mice. Here and there I could see the odd cluster of dark torpedo shaped droppings along the back face of the counter and fragments here and there from some of the carefully triple packed bags of dehydrated foodstuff that we had left for just such a visit as the one we made today.
We’d have to do a bit of cleaning.

Terry was outside having climbed over the greying and decaying snow pile that had fallen off the roof into the shadows of the back of the cottage next to the back-shed. He now stood deep in the snow bank by the propane tanks patiently waiting l for my instructions. I now  shouted to Terry  to open the valves on the two propane tanks. I waited for his confirmation  and then carefully  removed the lids and their retainers from the top of the wood stove, placing them individually in a stack on the front burner of the old Beech brand propane stove that stood next it. By now Reid had the shutters locked back from the side window, adding to the   brightness of the room. Returning to the back shed I grabbed some old newspaper and a handful of kindling. Back in the kitchen, I first crumbled up the newspaper into individual balls, using one sheet at a time. I then lined the bottom of the stove with the balls. I laid several thin strips of cedar kindling across the newsprint bed in a carefully laid out crisscross pattern. Returning to the shed I grabbed several pieces of birch and maple stove wood, then laid these lengthways across the kindling bed.

Reaching up, I took down the can of matches. It was an old gray back metal coffee can from the early fifties that we kept on the top of the cupboard exclusively for this purpose. I removed the lid, took a single match and struck it across the metal surface of the stove. It burst into flame. The strong smell of sulfur drifted up into my nostrils as I leaned over the stove holding the match on a slightly down turned angle and moved it down into the small cavern of the stove.  I then purposely dropped it directly onto one of the paper balls. It looked like it was going to ignite, but then it slowly diminished and snuffed out with a small telltale wisp of smoke, leaving the interior of the stove once more in virtual darkness. I repeated this procedure three more times, positioning each successive match into a different local within the stove bed. Finally, the last match danced brighter and brighter, illuminated by the additional flame of the burning newsprint. Now the cedar began to bum, the flames licking along the sharp edges of the crisscross bed. 7his was followed quickly by the ever-increasing cracking and popping that is unique to cedar when it is aflame. Soon the entire assembly was engulfed in flame, its flicking fingers reaching up into to the room. well above the top of the stove. I quickly replaced the components of the stovetop and closed the damper to half on the side of the chimney.

My hands were almost numb by now from the persistent cold. I rubbed them vigorously together trying to stimulate the circulation, holding them inches above the stove. Slowly, a sense of warmth began to return as the heat of the fire spread across the surfaces of the stove and began to radiate into the room. Reid and Terry now stood beside me, all now trying to gain some warmth as the wood stove began to do its job. We added as much wood now as the stove box could handle. Reid pushed the door closed and returned to the stove edge. Taking another match from the tin, I moved again to the gas stove. I simultaneously struck the match across the stove surface with my right-hand,  while reaching down and with significant pressure slowly turned on the valve for the front burner. I applied the light match to the surface of the burner and the gas immediately burst into blue flame. We had filled the two old steel kettles with water last fall and left them sitting on the back of the stove in anticipation of our arrival. They were like blocks of steel, still absolutely frozen solid. Taking the largest of these, I slid it across onto the lit burner. I then repeated the whole process for the second one as well. Soon we had all the hot water we would need to clean up the counters and provide each of us with a refreshingly hat cup of instant chicken soup.

By this time, we had checked out the rest of the cottage. We’d turned on the sidelights in the living room, laid the fire in the fireplace and brought out the space heaters. Within the hour the living room, in spite of the lack of insulation, was comfortable and the kitchen had reached good healthy and toasty eighty degrees. We had now placed our gear inside the cottage, our foodstuffs in the back shed and placed additional space heaters in each of the two bedrooms that we planned to use.

Most of the chill was now out of the air now that we sat gathered in front of the fireplace, sitting silently lost in our respective thoughts looking deep into the flames. The fire burnt brightly, sending dancing patterns of flickering light across the ceiling, walls and into the very comers of the room. The light of day had now faded replaced by the black cloak of the overcast night adding to the importance of the fire’s light. The wind had picked up and it could be heard roaring unfettered across the open spaces, pull and pushing at the outside structure of the old building. The wooden Studs and the tongue and groove sidings that formed the Old Girl’s exterior groaned and creaked, as she stood taunt and unyielding against the onslaught of the winter winds. The smell of the fire permeated the air in the room with the sweet mixed aromas of burning birch, cedar and maple. We were at peace, nothing could be more meaningful at this moment, than this sense of being alone, deep in the heart of nature, yet safe and warm, with only our own resources to protect us from this cold and desolate winter’s night.

By Gib Heggtveit




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