A lovely spring day in Laramie, Wyoming.
Though spring has officially arrived, I knew I wouldn’t find any visible changes in the two trees I’m following. Here in the continental interior at 7200 feet elevation, it’s too early for flowers or leaves on trees. But there is one exception—the American pussy willow, Salix discolor. So before I checked on the trees by the art building, I walked up “Willow Canyon” just east of town to see how the willow was doing.
I discovered this willow on a hike in late February, 2015. Catkins were already emerging! Just the tips were visible, but still I was astonished, and chose the willow as the tree to follow that year. And of course it soon became “my willow” … trees are that way.
A full healthy canopy; August 2015.
I still visit my willow periodically. It's a beautiful tree when fully leafed out, but last August I discovered to my horror that all the leaves were dead! It was much too early for annual leaf fall, so I presume it was because of our drought. “What does this mean?!” I was worried … … and I was really happy yesterday when I found it covered in catkins :-)Willow standing behind two junipers.
Tiny white dots are catkins, not snow.
A few dead leaves still hang on ... imagine the canopy full of these!
Occasionally the sun broke through the clouds, making the catkins shine.
These catkins are not as far along as those of April 2015 (below). I'm not surprised. We're having a cool snowy spring. But snowy is fine—we need the moisture.April 2015.
Lattice by Donatellia Austin, 2018; Paper, Fabricated Steel.
I wondered if anyone would tell me not to photograph the artwork, but the few people who walked by said nothing, didn't even glance my way. Then I looked up and realized ... I was being watched!