I love winter.

It’s partly the drawing in, staying warm, keeping together with family and friends. But just as much, it’s bundling up, walking in the snow, feeling icy weather, watching changes in nature. Leaves are down; more light and sky are visible through the branches. On clear nights, the stars seem to catch on the boughs, swinging so close to earth you feel you can almost touch them.

There’s nothing better than the winter beach. Storms push the tides higher, and equally tug them out so far the tidal flats seem to go on forever. Rolling waves, high wind blowing foam of the white crests, while rafts of water birds—buffleheads, surf scoters, brants, red-breasted mergansers among other winter residents—take shelter in coves.

Two years ago I experienced the Winter of Magical Birding. A nature photographer friend and I saw everything. One brilliant freezing day we went down to Barneget Light. We stood on the long stone jetty observing Harlequin Ducks, their brilliant masks and notable white dots visible as they fed in the seaweed just below our feet on the jetty’s leeward side.

Another excursion into the Catskills brought sightings of fifty, a hundred, White-winged Crossbills and Red Crossbills. It was an irruption year, and the small passerines had flown down from the boreal forest in search of a fine cone crop. The day was cold and snowing, and we were surrounded by forest. The crossbills thronged in a stand of blue spruce, attacking the cones, and I’ll never forget the bright sight and the sounds of seeds being cracked, their hulls clicking as they fell to the ice-encrusted snow.

The third and greatest sighting occurred on Jones Beach, where a young male Snowy Owl had decided to spend a few days. We arrived just past dawn, watched the rising sun’s light turn the owl’s white feathers golden. More than any other bird I love the exquisite and mystical Snowy Owl.

Snowies live on the tundra, and when lemmings, their preferred food, are scarce, they fly south and search out flatlands that remind them of home. Beaches are perfect, and they have the requisite food source: mice and voles.

That day my feet and hands froze, but it was worth it. I walked down the beach, watched the waves crash, saw a surfcaster catch a late-in-the-year Striped Bass, watched seagulls breaking quahog shells and eat the clams inside, and saw an enormous flock of Snowy Plovers fly in from the east. Even better, I spent long hours with the Snowy Owl.

Late afternoon when the sun went down, the light glowed rose pink, illuminating the owl’s feathers. He stared straight at us, all the hunger and mystery in his yellow eyes, and suddenly took flight. Wide wings spread, he flapped once, and went into a silent glide over the thicket of dried beach grass. Darkness came fast, and he was lost to view.

That might be my favorite metaphor for winter. The nights are long, and it might seem light will never return. The dark brings contemplation, inspiration, a feeling of things vast and unknowable. But I’m filled with anticipation, the way I felt as a child with a glittery Advent calendar and a fresh window to open every day, a new candle to light each week, knowing Christmas would come.

Winter lasts long, but it’s beautiful, and then there is spring.

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  • Susan Douglas

    Luanne,
    I just love how you write! It’s very inspirational to me. I love writing about nature and trips I take and spiritual things that are happening or have happened. I am trying to get a book togehter too but it’s a long journey. I’d love to read this one.

  • RTB

    >There’s nothing better than the winter beach. Storms push the tides higher, and equally tug them out so far the tidal flats seem to go on forever. Rolling waves, high wind blowing foam of the white crests,

    I was looking at pictures of that and thinking of the beauty. Your description, as usual, is perfect! :) One of my many favorite things about your books, is when you help me make the transition from summer to winter. I’m a summer beach person, even though, I find beauty at the shore all year round.

    Your bird adventures are fun to read. In Spring Lake, NJ, my favorite are the mute swans.

  • Lea

    you are truly an inspiration to me, im so thankful that your novels have reached the Philippine shorelines, i have read 10 of your novels and i love them all, the way you put emotions even to the most simple things. I really love your work, i hope i can read them all.

  • Kathy

    Your description of the winter beach is so beautiful, I wish I lived closer to the coast so that I could experience that. I love the New England coast line in fall, my favorite time to visit. The snowy owl truly came to life with your wonderful description of him.

  • Julie

    Great writing!!!! You always have a way of capturing the very essence and nature of your subject in such a poetic and beautiful way. Thank you for sharing your insight with the world. I cannot wait for your new book to come out. I am trying to wait patiently. Until then….Merry Christmas and happy winter :)

  • Erla B. Youknot

    I just finished reading “Stone Heart”. It was so powerful to me, I read it in three days. If just one person can walk away from an abusive relationship or one family can see what a family member is going thru..all those hours writing the book is worth it!!! Fourty years ago I too was in a very abusive marriage, I was lucky I walked out with my two babies a daughter & son. When my daughter woke up crying in the middle of the night saying “momy where are you?” I knew it was time to leave. Thank you for writing “Stone Heart”!

  • http://poneshto.com/ Claude Cronkite

    “I have study few of the articles on your site these few days, and I really like your style of blogging. I bookmarked it to my bookmark web site list and will be checking back soon. Pls visit my internet site as well and let me know what you think.”

  • Janice

    As a transplant from the New Haven area of Connecticut after 50+ years to Charleston, SC, thank you for your writings….they bring me home. <3

  • Sharlyn Ricks

    Just finished reading Secrets of Paris. Loved it…How about a sequel. This couple still has a story to tell!!!

  • Rosemarie

    Ms. Rice

    I read your book The Silver Boat and enjoyed reading it.
    I took the book out of the library and the copy that I read did not have the ending published in the book. The book went to page 261. The book was not damaged or altered in any way. Perhaps you should get in touch with your publisher to coorect this. If someone had to buy this good and pay #25.00 and saw this I am sure it would not be appreciated.

    As I don’t care for unfinished endings – at the end when they all go together a the dinner what happen to Peter and what was the sister’s reaction when the other sisters wanted to sell their share of the house.

  • Lynn Murray

    I LOVE your books! I haven’t read them all yet, but they are definitely all on my future lists of reads. We spend a lot of time, winter and summer, on Lake Michigan. It’s not the ocean, but the next best thing. We love all the seasons there. Is there a way that I can find I list of your books that have sequels so I don’t read them out of order?
    Thank You and keep on writing!
    Lynn

  • jean carhart

    my copy of the silver boat ended abruptly in the middle of a sentence. i don’t know if this was intentional or if i got a bad copy. anyone else have this happen?

    • http://luannerice.net Luanne

      dear jean and rosemarie,
      how terrible that your copies of the novel ended so abruptly–i have forwarded your messages to my publisher, and we will figure it out and be in touch. thank you for alerting us.
      best wishes, yours confusedly, luanne

  • Lisa Fluhart

    Luanne
    Just finished The Silver Boat. I really enjoyed it. Just one question. At the beginning of the book Dar was communicating with Harrison via the bulletin board because he didn’t have a phone. At the end of the book, she called him on the phone to talk about Rory. When did he get the phone? Did I miss it? Thanks for the great books.
    Lisa

  • Robyn Spencer

    Your writing is so descriptive. I get pulled into your stories and can’t wait to find out the outcome. On the other hand I don’t want the stories to end. Just love your books and have read them all. Thank you so much.
    Robyn

  • Sarah Hill

    I love your book, and have read you for years. I’m looking forward to your latest.

  • http://silentwhisper1.blogspot.com/ Dee

    Hello—-Luanne, how ever did I miss a new post? especially a ‘winter post.” Chuckles. I’m slipping, or? counting what comes in three’s far too much recently.”Blick.”
    Its lovely once again to read of what you see in a season where? my own sights and smells may differ. Owls are lovely and mysterious, don’t you think? Its rare but I’ve on occasion had a snow owl fly right past me on the freeway through the night sky, startling me.
    We have Bald eagles also, that congregate in large groups fishing on the river, or? perched high atop a tree in a massive nest, here in the Fraser Valley.The Eagles are sacred with the native Indian’s here, and although I am not native, I still feel this sense of awe, and ghostly spirit with the sight of an eagle.

    Anyways…this was a lovely post of winter you left us here, I thank you once again for your vision- It’s like a field trip for me, a virtual one.Smiles~

    PS. I haven’t read Silver Boat yet, Lu, I apologize, perhaps I’ll ask Santa for it this year. However, I am still reading, Safe Harbor and quite enjoying it, well, outside of the tears I dropped while reading of Quine clutching her parent’s ashes at the airport.
    I was on lunch break at wrk reading that part, where, ahem, I had to put myself back together,lol.
    Thanks, Luanne! Thanks a lot! (winks).

    Warm fleecy hugs from BC.
    Dee~

  • Peggy Court

    Thank you for your incredible stories, I have every one of your books and cannot tell you how many times I have laughed and cryed with them. You write fantastic family oriented stories, that make us remember our own families with smiles and some tears. I cannot tell you how many times I’ve grabbed the kleenex box (both happily and sadly) to keep reading through to the end. Thank you for each and every one, and please keep them coming, I miss you when you aren’t writing.