Saturday, January 10, 2015

Rideau Crossing (oil on canvas 12 x 16)

26 December 2014 found me out painting on my birthday, on the east shore of the Rideau River at  Gideon Adams Park, 3.3 kilometres south of Osgoode, Ontario. This spot is a little over 1.5 kilometres downstream from where the Energy East pipeline route crosses the Rideau River. Having chosen my scene from the vantage point of a small boulder beside the boat launch ramp, I sat with my canvas on my knees and my boots in the sun-melted black muck. Its surface was covered with a felt of bleached and drifted Star Duckweed sprinkled with tiny white snail shells. To my right rose a winter-bleached screen of Narrow-leaved Cattails, and to my right bulged a shape rather like my boulder, but Fred identified it as a hump of old foam rubber with grass growing through it. 

Fred moved along the shore as I scrubbed on the burnt sienna
underpainting, collecting a "recycling bag" of the kind of litter humans leave, as well as carefully gathering handfuls of the most shell-rich duckweed drift. This is the "long Reach" of the Rideau Canal, between Merrickville and Manotick. Its level is drawn down a little for the winter, about 30 cm below summer levels, but now risen a little from meltwater. The ice along shore is shallowly flooded over by meltwater. We saw melted-down snowmobile tracks heading out from the boat launch towards a single early ice hut in mid-river.

There were some Bur-reed among the cattails, and strikingly, no rough dark spikes of Purple Loosestrife, which used to dominate Rideau shores like this, thanks to the diligent little Galerucella Beetles brought from Europe to control it. Fred noted one stand of tall Nettle, reduced to strong narrow stalks and terminal tufts, and Swamp Milkweed scattered in grey poddy clumps along the shore. Some boat-podded Common Milkweed stood about the field, leaning at odd angles, having somehow escaped the mowing.

The trees along the shore are mostly Ash, with some White Elm, and right near the launch a few big Eastern White Cedar. Most of these have been hacked into by Pileated Woodpecker. There is one Bur Oak sapling, corky and spreading branchlets from its base. Some of the Elm have succumbed to Dutch Elm Disease, but in the bark of the Ashes there are no tiny "D-shaped" exit holes which are the sign of Emerald Ash Borers. These devastating invaders are all through urban Ottawa now, and  when they arrive here, this shore will be desolate. 

Fred found a scattering of Canada Goose feathers, left by a predator, perhaps human. A Crow flew past as I gathered my brushes up and packed my paints. A Raven passed unseen overhead, commenting, "Clork, clork". As we headed back to the truck we noticed a Robin, and a few Starlings and Redwings hanging about in an Ash tree above a heavily fruited Buckthorn bush. These migrants seem to have been staying longer into the winter in recent years, perhaps due to the gradual spread of Buckthorn.


Now after the social distractions of the holidays, I've finally finished my "birthday painting", and Fred is going through the drift sample from the site. It proves to be a curious mixture of shells – a few of the juvenile Zebra Mussels that have radically changed the ecology of the river since 1990 by wiping out both the native Unionid Mussels and the filter-feeding European Faucet Snails that used to be super abundant in the Rideau. There are also no Viviparus Mystery Snails and no fingernail or pea clams. Now the big shells are mostly Bell-mouth Ramshorns (Helisoma campanulatum), and only a few Large Ramshorns (H. trivolvus). No high-spired Lymnaeid Pond snails at all! The medium sized snails are flat round Promenteus exacuosus, most of them eroded to white little disks. The little snails (only a few millimetres in size) are mostly round-spired Hydrobiids, and tiny flat Gyraulus, with a very few of the usually-common Valvata.  He sifts, puffing and shaking the fluffy dried duckweed, then washes the results to further separate the shells from different classes of detritus. He's found only two land snails among the hundreds of aquatic shells, One spindle-shaped Cochlicopa and one tiny disk-shaped Nesovitrea.


Dear supporters and patrons,

This 12 x 16 inch oil painting is available for $575 from Art Etc at the Art Gallery of Burlington  
For more information, contact Rhonda Bullock,
Art Sales and Rental Coordinator, (905) 632-7796 #301

Sales of my paintings support our research and conservation work,
Aleta

2 comments:

  1. Andrea Wood tells us:
    Baxter Conservation Area has grown over the years as a result of several property acquisitions between 1971 and 2008. In the 1990s, when the gas pipeline was constructed, it only travelled through a northern section of our property which was forested and not accessed by the public. The seven acre parcel where the pipeline crossed the Rideau River was privately owned by an individual. In 2008, the RVCA had an opportunity to acquire this seven acre parcel. TransCanada Pipeline was supportive of the property being transferred to a public body so they were one of the funders who made the acquisition possible.

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  2. ...for a bit more context here - Baxter Conservation Area is the site upstream of the painting where where the Energy East route is proposed to cross the Rideau, and where the existing Transcanada gas pipeline does cross the river/canal. Andrea Wood is the Baxter Conservation Area Supervisor, of the Rideau Valley Conservation Authority (RVCA). Many parks and Conservation Areas in Ontario are byproducts of industrial or water-system infrastructure, and we'd asked if this was the case for Baxter and the pipeline, which it evidently isn't. Thanks to Andrea for her effort in "search[ing] through some records at the office to determine when [RVCA] acquired certain pieces of property that make up Baxter."

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