We’re having a few days of faux spring. I ate lunch on the deck today, and noticed that the croci in the back yard are just beginning to push upward. That’s in contrast to last year, when that happened well into March, and no there were blooms until early April.
Temps were in the upper 40s on Saturday, and there was no threat of rain, so we took a walk along the Fox River in Batavia, Illinois.
Not so warm that there still isn’t a film of ice. Faux spring, after all, is still winter.
We walked along a peninsula that juts into the river. It’s partly parkland, with an easy trail near the edge of the water all the way around.
At the northern tip of the peninsula is a gazebo. Called a “pavilion” on the signs, but I know a gazebo when I see one.
There’s been a dam of some kind on the site since the 1830s, originally providing water power for various small factories along the river (flour, ice, lumber, paper, stone), a function long relegated to the past. The current concrete dam is a bit more than 100 years old, taking its name from the Challenge Wind Mill and Feed Mill Co., whose building was next to the dam. More prosaically, it’s also called Batavia Dam, and there seem to be long-term plans in the works to remove it.
The former wind mill (and feed mill) building.
I didn’t take a closer look, but the Batavia Historical Society says the building is in use even now, “partially filled with various, small companies.”
The city of Batavia has a building on the peninsula.
The Bulldogs are the local high school mascot, and 15 painted bulldogs were to be found in Batavia in the warm months of 2018.