By the river the thrice-banded woolly one is a sparkling
bristle, black so shiny it glows white, or luminous. I am too close and so it
begins to curl, but I back off soon enough. It lifts its head apparent (it is
perfectly symmetrical to my eyes), and rears, a tiny fuzzy sausage stallion.
And Hamlet arches to dip his stripes in the river, white
flag tail rudder.
I pull one stiltgrass plant from the leersia.
Yesterday up the mountain we find molars and claws, tiny, in
scat. Dried, white scat – just compact fur and bone. The pine needles are sharp
on the bouldered sunlit summit, and the moss is lightening, letting go, now
unhinged tiny carpet islands. At the vista, under sweet white pines, we watch
two red-tails riding thermals. There are oaks at the top, too, and all seems
thick and durable and dry and tannic. My lips begin to parch.
Under shade the boulders are soft enough with moss and
needles, angled gently and we nap. There are whistles from a far-off playing
field.
The descent follows stream-bed or game trails, no blazes,
and we are in ferns and hemlocks, that “forest” green, and a toppled hop
hornbeam taken by the grapes. It is tangled, and could be a dragon’s nest. One
woodpecker. The last bridge is old and strong, with the numbers “548” in metal
on one of the stringers – this great post lodged in earth and moss used to
stand with hawks.
1 comment:
so so so beautiful...I was there
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