• Home
  • The Bird with the Flaming Red Feet
  • Rare Bird: Marbled Murrelet
  • A Sideways Look at Clouds
  • Author
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact
Menu

Maria Mudd Ruth

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
author and naturalist
Homepage-Banner.jpg

Maria Mudd Ruth

  • Home
  • Books
    • The Bird with the Flaming Red Feet
    • Rare Bird: Marbled Murrelet
    • A Sideways Look at Clouds
  • Author
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact

Spring Swimming, Springing Swim

April 20, 2021 Maria Mudd Ruth
IMG_20210415_131125953_HDR.jpg

This past week’s unseasonably perfect weather in the Pacific Northwest has warmed the water, air, and soil enough for us to believe that Spring has fully arrived. No doubt cooler rainy days will return, but what a week for daily wild swimming in 60-degree-F water.

All winter my swimming buddy and I watched the cottonwoods on the shorelines of the lake, dreaming of the day—months hence—when the tree would green up, leaf out, and shimmer in the breeze and we would be swimming—actually swimming—and not just endurance dipping and shivering. The day finally came and what a glorious day it was. The the sun, the scent of cottonwood, the water that allowed us to relax, loll, and revel.

My friend put it best when she said she felt like she was “springing through the water.”

Like the once dormant and tightly budded cottonwood tree protected itself against the winter, we have come to life in the lake. After a winter of wool hats and gloves, fleece robes, shivering, shaking, and thermoses of hot tea, we can again swim the length of the lake with a “spring” in our stroke. We can relax in the sun on the shore afterward. Only when the leaves of the cottonwood turn yellow will our minds turn to “falling” through the water.

IMG_20210420_151740775.jpg
← Dream SwimWhy I Didn't Swim Here →

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive my blog in your inbox.

Thank you!
Blog RSS

Flying from Mountaineers Books this Spring—the story of the Pigeon Guillemot—the world’s most charismatic alcid. This non-fiction natural history will be on bookshelves and available from online retailers on April 7, 2026. Click a link below to pre-order a copy now from these purveyors:

Mountaineers Books (non-profit, indie publisher based in Seattle)

Browsers Books (Olympia’s indie bookstore)

Bookshop.org (support your local bookstore)

Barnes & Noble (in the book biz since 1971)

Amazon


A Sideways Look at Clouds from Mountaineers Books

A Sideways Look at Clouds from Mountaineers Books

Rare BirdORDER TODAY >>

Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet

“Compelling…  engaging.” —Library Journal

“Rare insights into the trials and joys of scientific discovery.” —Publisher’s weekly

Learn more about Rare Bird...

Enjoy this song by Peter Horne, "Little Bird, Little Boat, Big Ocean.” Written about the Marbled Murrelet, but the lyrics work well for the Pigeon Guillemot, too.


  • Wild Swimming
  • marbled murrelet
  • clouds
  • A Sideways Look at Clouds
  • Mountaineers Books
  • Rare Bird
  • old-growth forests
  • Open-water Swimming
  • Maria Mudd Ruth
  • Lakes of Washington
You must select a collection to display.

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive my blog in your inbox.

Thank you!
Blog RSS

©2025 MARIA MUDD RUTH  |  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED