With just one week to go before the winter solstice, and the
frantic holiday pitch building to a frenzied crescendo, November is now
nothing but a blur to me. The winter wind continues to etch itself indelibly
into my daily routine and is one of the few sounds to break the
silence of winter along with the occasional great horned owl and coyote call.
But yesterday, in a very unlikely place, I encountered another
voice of winter: the lake. After a bone-numbing cold spell marked by daytime
temperatures that barely reached -10 Celsius and nighttime temperatures that
plummeted to -15 Celsius, the lake froze over.
Yesterday, late afternoon, the temperature rose to a balmy 4 degrees-Celsius, the air was still and it was perfect conditions for happy hour on the
beach with a bonfire. As usual, I was first at the fire with my glass and
bottle of wine. I settled myself in front of the roaring fire and as I listened
to the snap and crackle of the burning wood and sipped my wine, I heard
something else--a long, slow, rumbling groan resonating from somewhere nearby.
Unsure what the sound was, or where it was coming from, I looked around me, but
there was nobody or anything remotely near to where I was sitting. Over the
ensuing 10 minutes I heard the incredibly loud sounds over and over. The sounds
ranged from a low, belly-aching groan to a high, fast-paced swoosh. At this
point, Mark joined me and as he sat down a giant boom and swoosh enveloped us. Mark, looking as a child would who had just discovered the magic of Christmas,
exclaimed “It’s the lake, making noises”.
Bev and Lanny joined us and we sat and listened to the lake
stretch and yawn as the waxing moon rose in the sky above us. As darkness
descended, a band of coyotes on the fringe of the lake joined in and the lake
chorus sang loudly all around us.
Geologists have a name for this acoustic phenomenon: ice
yowling. Yowling is described as low, drawn out moans that are very reminiscent
of whale calls. A YouTube search on “ice sounds” turns up a dizzying array of
recordings, though none of the recordings sounded exactly like our lake.
Our neighbor Bev has been at the lake for many years and is
most familiar with the voice of the ice. As ice expands and contracts, it
causes stresses through its depth and across its breadth. These stresses cause
the ice to crack and refreeze. The sounds of this cracking and refreezing are
transmitted through the ice and can get exuberantly loud. The colder the
temperature, the faster the ice grows and the more frequent the stress cracks
develop.
The lake does not grumble and groan every evening, and there’s
no telling when to expect its eerie yowl. But just hearing its hauntingly beautiful voice confirms what I already know, this lake is alive with a spiritual energy and I am blessed to live here.
We are so very blessed and yes I have heard many of those sounds at Osprey. The full moon is coming soon, maybe it will be clear and your can take your beach chairs, blankets and something warm to drink and go out at night and listen to the beauty that is all around us! Enjoy the lake.
ReplyDeleteBruce we heard this after you left on Friday. My first time...amazing!
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