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Winter By Design

Where do I begin? My annual homage to Winter? My current obsession with bridges, rivers, or with all things Design? Let’s practice Yes, and.

Winter, last-light view onto Topsham-shore of the Androscoggin River. Soft mound of snow with Mallard duck tracks all over. A Drake is swimming in the distant blue water. Tree branches frame the left side of the portrait.

This winter of 2025/26, I’ve taken several hundred variations of this photo. From this view of my Swinging Bridge, the A-frame towers cast vertical shadows on the Androscoggin river.

The ice line, snow line, and Mallard foot prints are re-written every single day.

I doubt the ducks are intentionally designing anything here.

Downstream from ‘my’ bridge is the Brunswick Dam. A telephoto view from the new Frank J. Wood bridge allows me to feel the enormous power of water held back. That’s a 600 foot wide wall of water with a straight 42 foot (controlled) drop of our mighty Androscoggin river.

Dam size matters like dose when it comes to power and destruction. Today we are at maximum efficiency for creating energy compared to the quaint water wheel days.

Close up of Brunswick Maine Dam, water flowing in half of photo and a giant ice dam structure on the right half
Water, two formats, flowing and stored energy

Large Ice grouping; Looking down stream from the Brunswick Maine Dam from the new Frank J. Wood Bridge.

I see ice slabs conferencing and puzzled, or angry eyes. But there is one other story I want to share.

A closer crop of the above photo and behold! A River Otter was here! Follow the tracks: belly slide and feet from top right and then to left of this picture.

A view looking down from the Frank J. Wood bridge, downstream from the Brunswick Dam. Top right corner shows tracks of a River Otter belly slide down snow covered rocks. River Otter foot tracks snake around the the snow covered ice.
Tracks of one individual River Otter. Bottom left of picture where the otter slid on its belly.

I was lagging behind my companion Alisa taking pictures, puzzling at these not-duck tracks, when she actually saw the otter hop then belly-slide into the open water under the bridge!

Dams–by design–change a river from a dynamic, free-flowing system to a regulated one.

Most heartbreaking, ready and fertile, in-their-prime fish cannot realize their drive to return back home. In spring the poor fish swirl helplessly by the thousands the near the water wall, when life wants most to live.

Design is usually thought of as intentional, up-front planning and creating. Yet, imbedded into the process itself is improvisation; spontaneous and unplanned, it is the collaboration–not arguing–with what we know and see and feel. Improv is a result of close listening. Perhaps it is why we have amazing ideas after a shower. Pent-up non-action (listening) releases that part of us that wants action or needs an answer.

Then we design functional bridges and make water into power and, eventually, figure a way to address our stranded fish.

Shore ice and blue water view from the Swinging Bridge, back of Dam and Frank J. Wood bridges (old and new) in the background with tall crane

Improvisation. The duck tracks, the shore snow-lines, ice dams, the river otter, even how the winter sun slant pleases us, can we see the design?

How is it that in the darkest, light-starved season, we have water that turns white when the temperature is just right?

6 Comments

  1. February 28, 2026 / 4:54 pm

    Lovely photos as always. I especially like the otter tracks. How lucky to see one!

    • March 1, 2026 / 4:39 pm

      Thank you very much Jane. I really appreciate you commenting.

  2. Mary Cay
    March 1, 2026 / 8:57 am

    Such interesting photos, I’m joyfully envious of the sea otter you saw. What luck !!
    Really enjoy your reelections.

    • March 1, 2026 / 4:41 pm

      Seeing the otter was amazing luck. I’m very glad that you like my reflections.

  3. Nancy Olt
    March 1, 2026 / 1:45 pm

    Beautiful photos! And a sea otter, very cool.

    • March 1, 2026 / 4:43 pm

      Thank you Nancy. It was cool! I bet there will be wildlife to be seen in your new ‘hood.

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