February is a short month and usually very cold, but there are astonishing things to be seen at night, if one can bring herself to wrap up and go outside for a bit of stargazey stuff. The sky is deep, inky velvet, the moon an icy orb framed by the vague shapes of sleeping trees and attended by a tapestry of faraway stars. On full moon nights in winter, Lady Moon always seems to be cradled in the whiskery branches of the old ash tree in the garden, and I never tire of looking at her.
Capturing cold night skies with camera and notebook is an uncomfortable business in winter, but we (Beau and I) wrap up warmly and go outside anyway. It is our way of "saying yes to the world", to the innate wildness of life in the Great Round of time, to the grandeur of the starry, starry night over our heads.
This month just has to be about owls. In early February, the Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus), claims a nest in the woods with its lifelong mate and settles down to the arduous business of raising another brood. The great "hornies" are among my favorite birds, and it is enchanting to hear a couple calling to each other across the snowy forest in winter. Northern residents to the core, the great owls thrive in cold climates, and the further one travels toward the Arctic, the bigger they grow.
The Saw-whet Owl or sugar bird (Aegolius acadicus) will not be far behind the great hornies in its own courtship rituals, and neither will the other owls of the Lanark highlands. There is love, fertility and parenthood in the air at this time of the year, among northern owls anyway. The rest of us are just trying to stay warm and not succumb to complete and utter madness before spring gets here.
Life can be stressful for those who lack feathers and dine not on mice and voles. Wolves and coyotes howl plaintively, across the snow dunes. Deer are yarded up in the woods and rapidly running short of cedar browse. Even the squirrels and rabbits in the garden look hungry and a little worried. No doubt about it, hunger is a beast well known in these northern snowbound places.
If we can just manage to hang on for several weeks longer, there are better and brighter times ahead. March promises slightly milder temperatures, relief and incomparable sweetness. Perhaps the ambrosial alchemy of the maple syrup season will be in full swing when the next full moon makes its appearance.

























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