The sun sets daily whether the lake is frozen or not.
Sometimes we see it, sometimes we don’t.
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Passing by the end of One Mile Bay last week before the ice went out, I saw little white dots on the ice. I thought it might be some pre-iceout phenomenon.
Turned out to be golf balls:
Someone getting a bit of early season practice. Or possibly smacking balls regularly all winter?
Must have a contract with Titleist to supply balls. Perhaps a frustrated Masters competitor?
Look out Bubba!
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The ice in Nipissing is being blown around by the wind.
Sunset point has collected some of the shards of the winter’s ice.
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Looking like panes of broken glass, the thin ice that formed overnight was piled on the shore by this morning’s wind action.
Very delicate.
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The ice on Lake Nipissing moved a bit last week when the wind blew from the North.
The Canadian Shield, tough and unyielding, piles the ice on top of itself.
Little bother, the sun will remove the burden in the next little while.
*Thanks to Francoise Noel whose blog revealed a new (to me) method of changing colour to monochrome.
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In spring the ice huts come off the lake. This is a particularly well constructed example.
A closer view:
I guess you have to go ’round the back?
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The ice is moving away from the shore leaving water in its place.
The black colour shows that it’s getting rotten.
One more week perhaps.
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The early run-off was slowed a day ago by more “normal” temperatures for this time of year. The water flow is a bit less frantic.
Now it feels more like spring than the summer of last week.
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Duchesnay Falls near town is running fast.
Recent record temperatures have caused the snow to disappear in record time.
The “We’ve got drought!” headlines are about a month away.
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Filed under Photographs