Mostly Cloudy   63.0F  |  Weather Forecast »
May 17, 2012
Home

May 2010

Ever Hopeful

05/24/10

Ever Hopeful

This morning, while I was barefooted on the front porch, taking pictures of big snowflakes landing on daffodils and tulips, I was buzzed by a hummingbird.  It was the first one of the season and, just like the past two years, the diminutive bird hovered where, in summertime, our feeder hangs.  When it didn’t find the feeder, it found me.  Needless to say, I dashed inside, dug out our hummingbird feeder, filled it with lukewarm juice, and hung it in the customary spot.  The hungry bird was back in a flash.  Though I hear little noise in town but murmurs of exasperation with the weather, it is the hummingbird that I really feel sorry for.  I hope he can get through a freezing night.

While it has snowed and rained over the past few days...

Posted at 08:49 PM | Permalink | Comments: 0

There's No Place Like Home

05/13/10

There's No Place Like Home

My husband and I just returned from a trip to the warm climes of Florida and the Bahamas.  Sounds like we didn’t miss much lovely spring weather here, and I have to admit that I was surprised on our return to find the aspen with their leaves still tightly furled.  It’s pretty hard to come back to rain and snow after the warm weather, bare feet and aqua aqua (the water in the Bahamas makes clear why the same word means water and a pretty color).  

But, on the other hand, there’s no place like home.  I love watching the osprey doing a little nesting and hearing the sandhills making their ratcheted calls.  The tulips and daffodils are doing their darnedest to bring some color to what was so recently a black-and-white world.  And...

Posted at 08:32 PM | Permalink | Comments: 0

Advertisement

About This Blog

Michael McCoy

Editor Michael McCoy is a native Wyomingite who, through no choice of his own, moved to Iowa (“the third greatest state in the nation,” he says) when he was only a few weeks old. After high school graduation, he beelined it back to the University of Wyoming, where he earned a degree in Anthropology and the nickname of “Mac.” In addition to his Teton-area editorial duties, Mac works for the Missoula, Montana-based Adventure Cycling Association and writes freelance articles and books about the outdoors. “But that’s enough about me,” he says. “This blog is about you. I will prime the pump with an entry now and then--but ultimately, we hope it will be our readers, both locals and out-of-staters, who keep the streams of conversation flowing.”

 

 

 

Contributing blogger Susan Traylor Lykes was born and raised in the Denver area, a third-generation Coloradan. She spent much of her childhood in the mountains, and took up fly fishing at the tender age of ten, wielding her grandfather’s old bamboo rod and Pflueger reel. After graduating from the University of Vermont, Susan earned a master's degree in Town Planning from the University of Montana. For the past decade, she has focused on nonprofit land conservation and land use, serving on the boards of the Land Trust Alliance, the Teton Regional Land Trust, and the Orton Family Foundation.
Susan and her husband, Mayo, call both sides of the Tetons home. They are enthusiastic travelers and outdoorsmen — hiking, skiing, fly fishing, and bird hunting.

 

 

 

Contributing blogger Jeanne Anderson is a Cheyenne native and graduate of the University of Wyoming who has spent the last 25 years as a writer, PR consultant, columnist, and editor. Her passions include hiking, cooking reading, traveling, community, and creativity (she’s in her third term on the Idaho Commission on the Arts). She credits her broad practical streak to her parents, who started the first travel agency in the Cowboy State—from them she learned “every bathroom in the world is down the hall and to the left.” Jeanne and her husband Peter started Dark Horse Books in Driggs in 1995; their two-year experiment lasted 14 years. Now out from behind the bookstore counter, she’s looking forward to many new adventures.

 

 

Recent Posts

Archives

Feed

Atom Feed Subscribe to the Life in the Tetons Feed »