On some winter days in the past, we shoveled out some smallish swamp woodland winter ponds for skating. It hasn't been cold enough for that lately. So this is a good memory - of the naturalist's daughter - on one of those winter ponds. Then the next photo shows her, some years later, at the pond just before our current stretch of weather (ten days ago, when there still was no ice to skate on). What will the future of these woodland ponds be? All of the surrounding ash trees will likely be gone. I hope there will still be ice - at least now and then.
But what will it mean if these "normal winter" events just happen much less often? If there is so much less snow cover in some winters, when cold weather does arrive, frost depths reach levels that may not be survivable by some species in normal winter dormancy (frogs, toads, some plants). There is much more to be learned about these questions -- and these are only touching the edge of the larger questions about our changing climate. Now, there is snow - and the ponds have ice - at least this year!

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