Posts Tagged Muhlenberg Lake

Night on Muhlenberg Lake

Uncle Frank and I watched CJ squat and stare at the camera while he waited eight seconds for it to take the picture.Uncle Frank held a cigarette like a laser pointer in a lecture hall as he spoke of aesthetic. CJ struggled to find a place to set his camera to get a good picture. Uncle Frank lamented the missing tripod he had acquired sometime during the sixties in a haze of boxing, Dylan, and New Direction paperbacks.

I thought of how unlikely this all was. Standing outside, no snow to be seen, after such a long cold and brutal winter; the air smelled of life for the first time in months. On the water, light shapes distorted by current, duck paddles.

How thankful I was to be standing with Uncle Frank and CJ without freezing. CJ said “check this one out”. Uncle Frank pointed out the curve of the sidewalk, the possible capture of an image.

I thought of nights to come. I watched thick shadows float and quack, a male duck chasing another male trying to steal his female.

* All photographs by Christian Olsen

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Deep Freeze: Summer – Video Post

In the midst of an arctic blast, the following video is to serve as a reminder of warmer times. Check it out.

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Solstice: Second Snowfall (A new look)

Winter is arriving on a self made white carpet today, the solstice is upon us. Today is the darkest day of the calendar year; with the sun keeping nearest to the horizon throughout the day. Naturally, it is also the day that signals the end of the growing darkness of winter and the beginning of the slow expansion of daylight that culminates in mid June with the longest day of the year.

Yesterday morning there was no want of light anywhere I stepped across the city of Allentown. Although we were spared the horrendous two feet our southern neighbors were buried under, a six inch snowfall is no slouch. Happily, the sun had managed to poke its energetic self from the clouds early Sunday morning to help clear the roads otherwise I surely would not have found myself stomping around the snowfields of parks that had been left by the nor’easter.

The psychology of snow is well documented whenever a flake is seen or a weatherman announces the possibility of an impending storm. People react to a coming snowfall, regardless of predictions, as if a hurricane was making landfall on the Lehigh. In the wake of the storm, we are left buried to whatever measured degree, we are left “in”, and we fall under a white sameness with silence as its greatest manifestation.

At Muhlenberg Lake, the snow appeared for the most part untouched, save the tracks of skiers and occasional footprints. The cold blue of the sky mingled across the face of the water until the two were all but indistinguishable from one another save the snow to tell them apart.

The brown stalks jutting from the accumulation and the yellow willow limbs seemed the greatest contrast of all; forming an earthen frame around the ethereal white and blue new portrait of winter. A cold wind that felt as if it curled from the edges of cirrus clouds and unfurled itself shockingly across the park was the herald of winter’s fledgling dominance. Above all, the scene at the Lake was quiet, serene, soothing… as if a great breath was drawn deeply into the chest and time allowed itself to slow for a moment.

Down in Fountain Park, I stopped on a bridge to view the creek. Here, Center City looked starkly clean, as if the snow scoured the dirt of 2009 from the surfaces of the buildings and allowed them to shine again, for the first time. In the distance, the Eighth Street Bridge loomed large over the park as it always does but asserting a greater aesthetic severity with nothing but bared branches and white fields to contrast with it.

I drove up, parked and walked across the bridge for the first time to take a new look at Fountain Park as it showed off its winter coat. The view from the bridge was incredible.

The Little Lehigh almost appears with the same blackness as Martin Luther King Boulevard, as if even a natural aspect of the environment was a foreigner in this new land of snow.

In Trout Creek Parkway, I experienced the greatest absence of the day. The Knotweed was almost invisible in the winter wonderland. Without the thick Knotweed dominating the landscape, Trout Creek Parkway was an entirely new place to stumble around in.



Here though, the persistence of life was present in the nearby feeder stream. Echoing the brown contrast at Muhlenberg Lake, here the contrast turned to green. Green enough that it would seem these plants were blissfully ignoring the fact that winter had arrived six inches deep all around them.


I had spent so much time in these places this past summer that to walk around them this morning, in these conditions, was like walking in them for the first time. It was not just an observable change in appearance but an entirely new distinction of personality. These places are new again and will in all likelihood look this way for awhile. That is until the equinox and the arrival of Spring. Then, just like this snowy Sunday morning, I imagine I will find myself in these places for the first time.

See Also:
First Snow: Lehigh Parkway

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Muhlenberg Lake: I'm on a Boat

As one of the major projects of the WPA, Muhlenberg Lake has been the focal point of Cedar Beach Parkway for almost eighty years. On Saturday afternoon I was able to do something I had not done since I was a child. I went for a paddle boat ride on the lake.

I have heard people sarcastically remark that our lake is more of a pond and before I even began my excursion I learned that there is a significant amount of truth to those remarks. Being a nervous man, and not knowing the depth of the water (I have always been curious), I asked the lady at the boat rental about what actions should be taken if I fell off the boat. She replied: “Stand Up.”

With the din of Sportsfest behind us, my brother and I set forth on the open waters.

There has not been a more beautiful July afternoon than the one I spent on the water. In a summer month so typically defined by soupy humidity and excessive heat; a cool breeze blew across the water and they sky was blue, not the yellow or gray that our summers are typically defined by.


Looking down from the sides of our blue vessel, I could easily see the bottom of the “lake”. Closest to the entrance of Cedar Creek the water is barely a foot deep due to a large sediment build up. At this point, I began to wonder whether or not a significant flood would accumulate enough sediment to eliminate half of the “lake”.


Paddling up into the cove near the land bridge, the water grows very stagnant. I was worried about paddling aground so we did not venture very far in. There was a time, when I was younger, that Muhlenberg “lake” was a hot spot for geese and ducks. In recent years, there have been efforts to decrease the population of waterfowl and it looks as if those efforts were very successful. There were still some geese and ducks present however. (I was glad to see them)

Keeping an eye to the “lake” floor, I began to wonder about the future of our “lake”. It is apparent to an amateur environmental awareness that this body of water is in sad shape. I know that at the tail end of the Cedar Beach Parkway renovations that Muhlenberg “lake” is going to be addressed. I hope that plans to remove the land bridge come true and proper circulation can be achieved through this method.

It would appear that the “lake” might have to be dredged due to years of sediment build up and poor circulation. If that option is to be considered I would guess that it would be very costly. It would seem to me that the future of this water body is very much up in the air. Without question, something needs to be done.







This is a beautiful landmark of our city. We cannot forget it.

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Muhlenberg Lake: I’m on a Boat

As one of the major projects of the WPA, Muhlenberg Lake has been the focal point of Cedar Beach Parkway for almost eighty years. On Saturday afternoon I was able to do something I had not done since I was a child. I went for a paddle boat ride on the lake.

I have heard people sarcastically remark that our lake is more of a pond and before I even began my excursion I learned that there is a significant amount of truth to those remarks. Being a nervous man, and not knowing the depth of the water (I have always been curious), I asked the lady at the boat rental about what actions should be taken if I fell off the boat. She replied: “Stand Up.”

With the din of Sportsfest behind us, my brother and I set forth on the open waters.

There has not been a more beautiful July afternoon than the one I spent on the water. In a summer month so typically defined by soupy humidity and excessive heat; a cool breeze blew across the water and they sky was blue, not the yellow or gray that our summers are typically defined by.


Looking down from the sides of our blue vessel, I could easily see the bottom of the “lake”. Closest to the entrance of Cedar Creek the water is barely a foot deep due to a large sediment build up. At this point, I began to wonder whether or not a significant flood would accumulate enough sediment to eliminate half of the “lake”.


Paddling up into the cove near the land bridge, the water grows very stagnant. I was worried about paddling aground so we did not venture very far in. There was a time, when I was younger, that Muhlenberg “lake” was a hot spot for geese and ducks. In recent years, there have been efforts to decrease the population of waterfowl and it looks as if those efforts were very successful. There were still some geese and ducks present however. (I was glad to see them)

Keeping an eye to the “lake” floor, I began to wonder about the future of our “lake”. It is apparent to an amateur environmental awareness that this body of water is in sad shape. I know that at the tail end of the Cedar Beach Parkway renovations that Muhlenberg “lake” is going to be addressed. I hope that plans to remove the land bridge come true and proper circulation can be achieved through this method.

It would appear that the “lake” might have to be dredged due to years of sediment build up and poor circulation. If that option is to be considered I would guess that it would be very costly. It would seem to me that the future of this water body is very much up in the air. Without question, something needs to be done.







This is a beautiful landmark of our city. We cannot forget it.

,

1 Comment

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