Friday, September 17, 2021

The Pond at Roshara

 


                                                                Steve Apps Photo

When we bought our farm in 1966, the pond in the valley to the west of the buildings could best be described as a large puddle in a good-sized marsh.  Slowly the water level increased.  By 1973-1975, the pond was filled to its banks.  It was a place for swimming and canoeing, a place for bird watching, and animal gazing as deer, racoons, fox and other wild creatures came to the pond for a drink, especially during the often hot and dry days of mid-summer.

               The pond has no inlet nor outlet, it’s a water table pond.  As the water table in the region goes up and down, so does our pond.  By the early 2000s, the pond level returned to about where it was in 1966, when we bought the place.  We wondered if it would ever return to the level it had been in the 1970s.

               Starting in about 2018, the rains became coming.  Fifteen inches of rain in 10 days in August of that year.  Once more the pond began looking like its former self.  By 2020 the pond was higher than it had ever been in recent memory.  Spilling over the banks of its once high point.  Surrounding trees on the  banks, oaks, aspen, cottonwood—and eventually killing them.  Killing cottonwood trees that were likely more than a hundred years old.

               This year, the pond, best described as a small lake, remains high as the rains continue to fall in central Wisconsin.  Seven inches in a couple weeks.  All the wild creatures love it—the pair of Canada geese that nest there and the sandhill cranes that nest there every summer.   How long will it remain a small lake?  One of the mysteries of nature that I find so interesting.

THE OLD TIMER SAYS: Ponds, like so many things in nature, are filled with surprises.

 

WHERE TO BUY MY BOOKS:

Want to learn more about the importance of rain to farmers.  Pick up a copy of my book, NEVER CURSE THE RAIN.  You can buy it at your local bookstore, order online from bookshop.org, or purchase from the Friends of the Patterson Memorial Library in Wild Rose—a fundraiser for them. Phone: 920-622-3835 for prices and ordering.
Patterson Memorial Library
500 Division Street
Wild Rose, WI 54984
barnard@wildroselibrary.
www.wildroselibrary.org

If you live in the western part of the state, stop at Ruth’s home town, Westby and visit Dregne’s.  and look at their great selection of my books, including my new ones, or order a book by calling them at 1-877-634-4414. They will be happy to help you.

 

 


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