Showing posts with label Ravenseyrie Sorraia Mustang Preserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ravenseyrie Sorraia Mustang Preserve. Show all posts

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Fog on Christmas Day at Ravenseyrie on Manitoulin Island



Foggy Dawn at Ravenseyrie on Christmas Day


 Dawn came to Ravenseyrie on this Christmas Day with a wonderfully atmospheric fog, providing a rather magical element to our distribution of Christmas breakfast to the “wild” bachelors.  I was born in later December and have lived all my life in regions where a White Christmas is the norm.  But on rare occasions, conditions have been mild and snow has been lacking on Christmas Day and so it is for us this year.

A Ravenseyrie snow scene from December 6, 2021


Just yesterday (Christmas Eve) we had perhaps 12.5cm of snow covering the landscape, more in drifted spots - which isn’t all that much for Manitoulin Island this time of year, but certainly enough that our Ravenseyrie Sorraia Mustang Preserve had a winter wonderland appearance.  

December 6, 2021 at Ravenseyrie

That changed, however, with the above freezing temperatures and rain that came over the course of last evening.



By late morning, the fog had dissipated and later in the afternoon there were periods of sunshine.  

Fidalgo on a nearly snow-free range/Christmas Day


With the temperature a little better than 2ºC and very little snow left, Kevin and I decided to go on a foray for Juniper berries.  Foraging for ripe Juniper berries is a somewhat tedious enterprise, but on a day like today when whiling away the time is an acceptable activity there can be quite an enjoyable experience to be had.  For me, getting absorbed into the wild landscape - the sound of the wind, the colours and scents, shapes and textures are a mind-altering drug, with the feeling of deeper connection and obliviousness to time passing.  This is very much like when I am beach-combing for special stones to use in my Paleolithic-style rock paintings.  It is a sensation that I feel is quite medicinal - especially during such troublesome times the human world continues to experience.  I am so glad that Kevin was able to join me!

The main sector of the preserve where there are good Juniper berries to be found







Kevin stops to admire the wonderful trunk of the Zen Elm 


A few of the Juniper berries I will use dried as a spice in cooking.  Most, however, we are macerating and soaking in vodka to make a simple gin for mixing in herbal liqueurs.  Such drinks are another type of medicinal we partake of…one that can be especially helpful to us when the harsher elements of winter return…which is quite likely soon!


Sorraia stallion, Altamiro, from a winter several years ago



Wishing everyone a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Friday, January 31, 2020

Forever -- is composed of Nows --




Raven flying over the Ravenseyrie Sorraia Mustang Preserve
East Bluff, Manitoulin Island, Ontario

There is a timelessness for me, living up on the wild East Bluff among the horses and working down in my studio on the bay within the human realm.  

Seasons come and go...That which was once young seems less so...and yet walking in winter fog among such elemental things - especially when away from the hum of humanity, one feels very much like the plants and animals feel...that there is no meaning in a calendar that says it is the year 2020 A.D.

This delights me!

This is endlessly inspiring!

This keeps me sane!


Contentment presided over by the Red Osier Dogwood and the Fog


In the distance, the Zen Elm, meditative as always

The Maples in their advanced age

What a idea for an abstract painting this presents!

Forever -- is composed of Nows --
'Tis not a different time --
Except for Infiniteness --
And Latitude of Home --

From this --experienced Here --
Remove the Dates --  to These --
Let Months dissolve in further Months --
And Years -- exhale in Years --

Without Debate -- or Pause --
Or Celebrated Days --
No different Our Years would be --
From Anno Domini's --

                -Emily Dickinson


View of the East Bluff from my studio down on the bay
Gore Bay, Manitoulin Island

From time not so distant...when the mares were home at Ravenseyrie


Thursday, March 14, 2019

Manitoulin Island in the Extreme Winter of 2019 - How the Wild Equines of Ravenseyire Cope


The Zen Elm at Ravenseyrie



"This is misery," I thought to myself, "I cannot keep this up!."
Trembling muscles, twanging ligaments, faltering mind and still I fill my shovel with snow while the winds howl whitely around me.  Taking breaks and coming at it again, eventually, the dense drifts were removed and the gate swung freely.  How many times did this scene play out this winter?  I have lost count!  Perhaps Monday's effort to free the gate is the last for the season and we surely are turning toward a significant melt?

I cannot blame Winter, my love for it remains.  What, then, accounts for the often wretched misery in my mind?
  
Bare-boned fatigue and nothing more.  

Rest and recovery will have me feeling peppy again, and healthier and stronger for the effort, I do believe.

It has been an inexpressibly challenging winter for everyone on Manitoulin Island, but especially so for all the wilderness creatures and those providing for livestock.  As noted last month in The Manitoulin Expositor:

Ian Anderson, a former Conservation Officer (CO) with the Ministry of Natural Resources (MNRF), trapper and long time resident of Manitoulin Island says the current weather conditions for deer on Manitoulin Island are the worst he has ever seen. “It’s official—these are the worst conditions I’ve seen for deer in my 46 years living on Manitoulin Island,”[...]“The conditions are really serious in some places with over 40 inches of snow on the ground,” said Mr. Anderson. He said there is no area on Manitoulin or the North Shore where there is less than 30 inches of snow on the ground (in places where deer would normally feed). “And this is really compounded by the freezing rain, and deer can’t travel on top of the icy crust and snow.”

For the equines of the Ravenseyrie Sorraia Mustang Preserve, conditions on the range have been like none we have ever experienced before.  Typically, even when snow levels are quite deep, while the horses do not venture down the bluff to the lake shore in wintertime, they do roam into all the various sectors up on the tableland.  Not only are these wild-living Sorraia horses accustomed to navigating deep snow for daily tours over the expansive landscape, but they also dig (excavate!) through the snowpack to dine upon the winter-pressed edibles below.  These horses also browse on bushes, shrubs and tree bark, gathering nutrition in fascinating ways.  

But this winter, the varied and numerous storms frequenting the island have created a situation where deep snow has been saturated by freezing rain, forming a crust often better than two inches thick, followed by more layers of deep snow. 

Kevin Droski poses with a segment of ice crust and his newly acquired helper, The Cat

For the horses, the sensation of penetrating the first layer of deep snow, then meeting with and breaking through the sharp ice crust and sinking belly-deep further into the snow underneath the ice crust is, not unsurprisingly, painful and emphatically off-putting.  They therefore have curtailed their usual sector to sector roaming of the tableland and instead keep themselves to just a scant handful of single-file, narrow packed trails that lead to sheltered spots and and feeding areas.  

There are no easy turns on one narrow path, especially when the stallions are head to tail and the one in front decides to stop.  It is a peculiar thing to see 6-9 horses lined up on a trail like a stalled train.  Eventually the leader is pressured to continue forward or the group turns and goes back from where they had come.  Extreme lumbar engagement and deep flexing of hindquarters allows the horses exquisite poise, permitting them to artfully pirouette for changes of direction without chancing falling off the firm traction of the trail and becoming engulfed in deep snow.  These Sorraia horses are masters of collection!  Nature is the best dressage teacher.  An entire book could be written on this alone!  Even so, in these restricted conditions a bachelor band comprised of seven stallions and two geldings (who have been claimed by one of the stallions as if they are mares), petty arguments and the habitual aggression among them has in some ways become more pronounced and in other ways subtly restrained.  When I am able to set aside my anxiety over the situation, it is fascinating to see how they adapt to whatever new challenge the day presents in their wilderness preserve.

One of the ploughed out feeding stations used on calm days
      
For two equines, (who due to particular circumstances we have had to keep separated from the rest of the stallions) the navigability of their spaces is even more restricted. Massive drifting has overtaken both the holding pasture and sorting corrals.  The old draft mule, Jerry, and the small, one-eyed stallion, Destemido* unfortunately cannot, as we had hoped, share the conjoined spaces of the holding pasture and corrals together, though we have tried numerous times.  Destemido's wanton aggression toward Jerry is more than what a 30 something gelded mule can tolerate.
*Destemido presently cannot be turned out on the range for reasons which are too involved to discuss in this particular blog entry    

Jerry, perhaps remembering the days when the wild stallions were young
and did not attack him, but played games instead

Destemido, taking a turn in the holding pasture as
Kevin returns from bringing hay to Jerry in the corrals

This means for the first time we have had to close the gate between the holding pasture and sorting corrals during wintertime.  For the duration of winter, week by week we are switching these sequestered boys so that neither of them has to be in the smaller space of the corrals for longer periods.

Jerry, taking a turn in the corrals

It is vital to be able to use the gate between the two sectors which has been a real problem due to the significant snowfall and the way the gale winds have repeatedly buried that gate in a dense, massive drift.  With the landscape so staggeringly snowbound, there is no getting the tractor in to scoop away the immense drift.  It falls to your author and her shovel and her determination.

The gate, reclaimed from the drift, at least on one side so far

 As noted in the opening of this blog entry, keeping the gate serviceable has turned out to be a repeated test of my endurance.  Wave after wave of snow and wind storms vexatiously undo all the work I  repeatedly do to keep it free to swing open.

Destemido in the holding pasture, which is overtaken by massive drifts

Destemido on his narrow trail.  The other stallions are out on the range side 

Added to this is the stress and anxiety of seeing how difficult these conditions are for the horses, especially for Jerry and Destemido.  Their narrow trails are so precarious and so near the tops of the fences and gates in spots!  When Jerry is in the holding pasture, there is not mischief over the gate that faces the open range.  But when Destemido is in the holding pasture and the other stallions come up to the gate from the range side, they each stand on three feet of packed drifts and attempt to do battle over the gate.  One misstep on the compacted, firm spot and either stallion risks tumbling into the gate or off into the four foot drifts. 

Destemido strikes out at Gosto

Since that photo was taken, the "platform" Destemido is standing on has grown even higher, so Kevin has strung a line from the upright posts to hopefully deter these types of nail-biting encounters.

Then there is the task (which falls to Kevin and his magnificent Kubota) to keep our driveway and shed areas free of snow.  Never in our fourteen years living here on the East Bluff has Kevin had to do so much relocating of snow to make it possible for us to get out and about.  He has made snow mountains all around the place.  This is in addition to the countless times throughout the winter he is packing toboggans full of hay and going to the forest to fell dead timbers for our firewood.  There is a Zen saying:

“Before enlightenment chop wood and carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood and carry water.” — Wu Li  

For Kevin, it is chop wood and pack hay.  Adding to that this year is "remove snow" and "drive every few days to Tehkummah to bring hay to the mares" - the later which is yet another stressful drama that winter has presented for us and the horses and too involved to elaborate upon in this today's blog entry.

Most days, Kevin maintains his Zen mindset while facing all these labours and he surely stands as a positive role model for me when my extreme fatigue gets the better of me.  In fact, I would be undone if not for Kevin's amazing strength and equipoise.

Our driveway, this past Monday morning

Drifted shut (again) and winds continuing to add more snow to it
  
Kevin assesses the task ahead

View from the trusty Kubota




Tuesday morning, no more wind and no more snow, driveway remains reclaimed!


An after the storm sunrise is most sublime!

Nice and tidy and navigable once more!

___
Edit on 16Mar19
A couple of my friends have noted that I forgot to mention that in addition to the brutal winds and copious amounts of snow, we had more than our usual share of monstrously bitter cold air temperatures due to the "polar vortex" that effected so many regions of North America this winter.  So I am adding a couple photos documenting a particularly "chilly" morning at Ravenseyrie when our thermometer dipped to -35ºF/-37ºC and only "warmed up" to -28ºF by midday.   Week after week we were showing temps that were in the minus twenties farenheit for daily "highs".  Very bitter, and dangerous with the wind chills that gales enjoyed creating.  Heating with wood during the deep freeze and high winds often makes it difficult to keep warm in the house unless one is near the trusty Jøtul wood stove.  At the kitchen table where I have my breakfast the temperature one morning was +45ºF and thick frost on the inside of the window.  We get by with extra sweaters and wool hats (and a dram of AlpenBitters #7 in the evening for sure!) and knowing that the deep freeze does not last forever.
28January19
 
Frost on the interior windows -35ºF outside +45ºF inside

With all the other shovelling at home and at work and the stints on snowshoes to help Kevin get hay out to the other horses, and useless anxiety over so many things I cannot control, somedays I am nearly done in both physically and mentally.  But I am buoyed by the stoic adaptations of the horses and bolstered by the ever-present support of a capable, congenial husband and with a little rest, I recover.

Once rested, I can look upon the character of this year's winter as if it is a supportive entity, like a shaman or a guru.  Through this philosophical lens, I am less inclined to look upon the character of this winter as a malevolent force, instead I perceive it as an essential facilitator of personal growth, designed to benefit the greater whole.

At the forest edge, bringing dried summer to hungry horses


A space further apart for Fidalgo and Altamiro


Inner reflections such as these are a luxury one rarely can indulge in when straining with chest pounding and steps faltering in the middle of a snowshoe trek to the forest with hay, often in the midst of tormenting winter storms...but even within those ordeals, the rarified beauty of the elements of the day do not go unnoticed.

Rarified beauty of an atmospheric referred to as "Sun Dogs"
on a frigid winter's day at Ravenseyrie

With the very real possibility that winters this severe will become the norm and not the exception, Kevin and I will develop new ways of maintaining the preserve and incorporate more effective measures of preparing for extreme weather.

Nutritious, delicious, homemade vegan fare at Ravenseyrie

This way of life is ours by choice, even as it often makes for austere and back-breaking conditions.  The rewards of stunning atmospherics, hungry horses feeding upon dried summer and knowing a warm house and an appealing meal with my beloved  await me at the end of day remind me that I am right where I want to be doing things that hold great meaning for me.  Let's see what the next day brings and carry on in a beautiful way!

______
I would like to extend immense gratitude to our municipal road crews who tirelessly work to keep our roads accessible, not an easy task on Manitoulin Island, especially on our East Bluff access.  Scotland Road has got to be the most challenging stretch for them, but somehow, they make it navigable and we few who live up here, sure are thankful for the great effort!
Scotland Road, the bend at McDougall Point






Saturday, June 4, 2016

Inspiration and Influences


Spring Thunderstorm Over Ravenseyrie
East Bluff, Gore Bay, Manitoulin Island
Ontario, Canada



The MOST important source of inspiration for painting ideas is our own lives... and what we like most. (Jack Dickerson)



I have been influenced by paintings I have seen in books, and in museums, not because they defined success but because they suggested possibilities. (Eleanor Blair)



Every day I wake up thankful to have made choices in life that make it possible to live here on Manitoulin Island. The dynamic elementals of our life on the Ravenseyrie Sorraia Mustang Preserve provide me with infinite inspiration all times of the year and catalyze creative ideas that number greater than my mind and body are capable of sustaining.

The big sky, the roaming winds, the shifting colours and the indigenous flora and fauna - especially the horses - permeate my senses whether I am awake or sleeping and quite naturally guide my work in the studio.

"Sun Propeller" (Huun Huur Tu) eventide May 24th, Ravenseyrie

I find my creative output this year also remains heavily under the influence of Toko Shinoda's artworks and Huun Huur Tu's music -  with wonderful, long-lasting effects that continue to be remarkably energizing.  In today's journal entry, I thought I would show a few examples of how inspiration and influences manifest themselves in my work.


Savour the moment, be in the Now.
                                                                                    --L. Gerard

Ousado (Altamiro x Bella), late winter


Not all the time, but quite frequently, I bring my camera with me when I am doing chores on our preserve, or just out hiking its many sectors.  I am often intrigued not just with epic sky scenes or evocative landscapes, but also am easily captivated by the play of a breeze upon the manes and tails of the horses, even after all these years.  I never tire of the amazing scenes!  Digital cameras are marvellous tools for capturing fleeting, elemental sensations and make it possible for me to conjure such moments through the mediums of writing and painting when in my studio.  While sitting on the ground one fine, late winter's day and listening to the pleasing sounds of the horses eating the supplemental hay we give them, I was entranced by the way the breeze was artfully turning over Ousado's forelock, and how the light accentuated his natural bi-colouring.

I have recently been putting my focus and practice in the study of sumi-e, and I felt that the photo I took of Ousado was one that might lend itself to ink wash painting.

An informational sign in the Ravenseyrie Art Gallery

Ousado, sumi-e, unframed



Sumi-e of Ousado under glass, with my calligraphed phrase
"Savour the moment, be in the Now."


Sometimes run with the wind, sometimes against it.  
                                                                     --L. Gerard


Altamiro (Ultrajado x Pompeia) chasing a seagull

How could I resist trying to capture the essence of this photo of Altamiro?  I first worked up a charcoal study:


Charcoal sketch #1 of Altamiro

Hmmm...it turned out a bit more representational than what the "influence-Toko-Shinoda-has-over-me" was looking for, so I tried another version:

Charcoal sketch #2 of Altamiro

Based on this second, more abstract charcoal study I did several sumi-e of Altamiro running and the photo below is a particular favourite.  I used sumi with touches of  Davy's grey and yellow ochre on Japanese paper.  Here it is matted with my accompanying phrase, "Sometimes run with the wind, sometimes against it.", waiting for glass:

Sumi-e of Altamiro

I felt this painting would make a nice open-edition print and also a fine art greeting card, so I created a modified digital image of it.  I publish my prints and cards myself, with the indispensable assistance of my iMac, Epson printer and inventory of fine art papers.


Fine art reproduction of my original sumi-e of Altamiro 



Even in seeming disorder, wind moves creatively and colours dance spontaneously...beauty and harmony are born of chaos.              --L. Gerard



Here is another example of how much the horses and the work of Toko Shinoda (as well as the rustic steppe sounds of Huun Huur Tu) influence and inspire me creatively.  First a photo of Legado:


Sorraia stallion, Legado (Altamiro x Sovina's Zorita)
Charcoal sketch of Legado


The nearly finished sumi-e of Legado


Sumi-e of Legado under glass

Like the painting of Altamiro running, I liked this sumi-e of Legado well enough to adapt to a fine art print and notecard:

Legado, fine art reproduction adapted from the original sumi-e

Along with the horses, the supple, elongated bodies of the Sandhill Cranes that migrate back to their breeding grounds in the wetland sector of Ravenseyrie are also repeated subjects in my paintings.  After eleven years, it seems as if the cranes and the horses have developed a rather symbiotic relationship.  The presence of the horses keeps the grasslands open and their manure provides seeds and larvae that supplement the cranes' diets.  The presence of the cranes provides an added assistance to the natural control of parasites that seek out equine hosts.  And...I think both species find each other fascinating and entertaining - certainly the landscape is a livelier place with these creatures inhabiting it!


Sorraias and Sandhills at Ravenseyrie
Walk in beauty, live in love.
             --L. Gerard

Breeding pair of Sandhill Cranes at Ravenseyrie


Sumi-e of Sandhill Crane


Sumi-e of Sandhill Crane under glass



Here are some other recent paintings that reveal those elements that inspire and influence me:



Believe in goodness prevailing.
                            --L. Gerard

Zorita's mane in winter

Zorita's mane, sumi and titanium white on Japanese paper


Sumi-e of Zorita's mane under glass


Sometimes insulate yourself from the elements, sometimes dance in the rain.       --L. Gerard



Charcoal study of Altamiro 

Sumi-e of Altamiro under glass


Live a creative life.
                 --L. Gerard

Sumi-e of Legado

Sumi-e of Legado under glass



I have had a marvellously liberating, enjoyable time exploring sumi-e while under the influence of Toko Shinoda and Huun Hurr Tu and the Ravenseyrie horses and the elementals of Manitoulin Island!  I confess less than a handful of the many recent paintings have lived up to the "ideal" sumi-e I have in my beginners mind, but there were a good number of them that I felt were evocative enough to be mounted and framed along with my calligraphic phrases.  Last week I cleared some wall space in my gallery so that I could devote an entire section to the sumi-e.  Won't my returning tourists be surprised how productive I was over the winter!  For those of you who may never make a trip to Manitoulin Island to visit the Ravenseyrie Studio & Art Gallery, I took a short video the other day to provide you a virtual tour.  Enjoy!



Make your art a gift of inspiration to others to work toward better things. (Richard Schmid)



Special thanks to Art Quotes/Presented by the Painter's Keys


We have a wonderful world to be inspired by and each new day is like an adventure into the unknown, where things that require a second glance can be captured in time on a canvas for anyone to enjoy forever. (Louise Corke)