Plants & Gardening

Plants & 
Gardening

Garden Stories

Finding Awe

Sometimes, it鈥檚 bright red holly berries that turn my head on a winter walk. Or, on a quiet day, it鈥檚 the sound of pine cones popping open to spread their seeds.

 

winter awe
winter awe
winter awe

 

As director of living plant documentation at the 91短视频, it鈥檚 my job to notice plants. You鈥檇 think I鈥檇 get tired of it. Nope. Nature never disappoints. Even on the coldest, iciest days (looking at you, polar vortex), I鈥檓 reminded of the grandeur of the outdoors, that nature still grounds and uplifts us.

In fact, short, regular 鈥渁we walks鈥濃攊n any season鈥攊mprove brain health and emotional well-being, according to a new study by the University of California San Francisco Memory and Aging Center and the Global Brain Health Institute. By turning your attention to something bigger than yourself, your stress tends to give way to positive emotions such as compassion and gratitude, the study finds.

Winter is the time to cultivate awe. It鈥檚 a season in which hidden beauty is revealed鈥攁s long as you keep your eyes open. A coworker recently told me, for instance, that she never had noticed the red twig dogwood in a Garden parking lot until someone pointed it out to her one winter. Now, on the grayest of days, when she passes that spot, she always looks for that pop of color.

You鈥檒l make your own discoveries, whether you鈥檙e walking at the 91短视频, in a forest preserve, or at another favorite spot. I鈥檝e got a few suggestions on what to look for in winter; download the GardenGuide app to help you find and learn more about specific plants.

 

 

winter seeds

Sound, motion, light, and color

You might hear the bustle of black-capped chickadees and other birds in the branches of a staghorn sumac. They鈥檙e looking for the big, fuzzy drupes鈥攐r fruit clusters鈥攖hat looks like red torches in the tree. You鈥檒l find a nice staghorn sumac in the Native Plant Garden.

While you鈥檙e looking up, you might watch for the fluffy seed pods of Japanese anemones, blowing in the wind like parachutes. The other day, I caught the light shining through an anemone at the Waterfall Garden. 

 

winter berries

The poetry of winter

It might help to think like a poet. Notice the small details on your winter walk like the texture of tree bark鈥攕ay the rugged geometry of a black walnut trunk. Or the lovely winter color of berries. Near the entrance to the Sensory Garden, the red berries of Red Sprite or Warren's Red possumhaw hollies may catch your eye, if the birds haven't eaten all the fruit. I also got a nice surprise the other day when I came upon a viburnum from China in bloom (some come into flower at the first warm spell in winter). To spot new things, you could try walking at a different time of day. If you鈥檙e lucky on an early morning walk, for instance, you might catch a magenta sunrise and the light streaming through the branches of bare trees. 

Then think how you might compose a short poem鈥攕ay, a three-line haiku鈥攁bout a lingering image and how it makes you feel. When I see lush evergreens flourishing in the dead of winter, for instance, I can鈥檛 help but be reminded of the wonder and resilience of nature.

 

kids walking in winter

study by the University of California San Francisco Memory and Aging Center and the Global Brain Health Institute

Benefits of walking

In a study on the benefits of awe walks, participants were asked to focus on their surroundings rather than themselves. One participant reflected on 鈥渢he beautiful fall colors and the absence of them amidst the evergreen forest鈥ow the leaves were no longer crunchy underfoot because of the rain and how the walk was more spongy now鈥he wonder that a small child feels as they explore their expanding world.鈥