Monday — never an easy time for the outdoors enthusiast. After a weekend of adventure, returning to the humdrum work-a-day world can make one melancholy. To help ease the transition, every Monday we feature a 90 Second Escape — essentially, a 90-second video of a place you’d probably rather be: a trail, a park, a greenway, a lake … anywhere as long as it’s not under a fluorescent bulb.
Today’s 90-Second Escape: Winter Water.
One thing I’ll miss about being in the woods in winter as the season starts packing to leave: Winter water. While the rest of the forest throttles down — the trees stop photosynthesizing and drop their leaves, critters spend more time in their dens, birds head elsewhere — for creeks, streams, rivers its business as usual. Even more so during the typically wetter winter months here in the Piedmont. And what great companions these waterways prove to be in the otherwise quiet forest, carrying on a constant chatter.
So before spring moves in with all festive luggage, a salute to our winter waterways (pulled from recent visits to Little River Regional Park on the Durham/Orange county line, Swift Creek Bluffs Nature Preserve in Cary and Horton Grove Nature Preserve in northern Durham County).
Up and down the Haw River, both east and west sides, where the Haw crosses US 64, are great places to enjoy winter water. The weeds aren’t so bothersome or ticky in the winter.
Here’s a recent hike of mine on the north east corner.
http://www.everytrail.com/view_trip.php?trip_id=1439769