Saturday, October 11, 2014

sensory time, late summer


“August” doesn’t mean a thing, not really. Or “July” or “September,” for that matter. Summer says something, and late summer even more, but still it makes one wonder whether you are referring to Chronos’ clock or the content of the year. Tell me where we are, when the shadows fall, and what the light is doing, and on whom it’s falling.

Are we at dandelion, after bud but before bedstraw? Are the hemlocks still two-toned with their fresh new growth? Tell me about the jewelweed – cotyledon stage, those two first juicy sprouts? Or is its gooey stem yet the size of your thumb? Are we after its orange upside-down cornucopia flowers, in the midst of springing seed pods? Then the sunchokes must be out, taking the place of the black-eyed susans. Have the acorns fallen? And the milkweed! Tell me about the milkweed. Leaf, bud, purplish-pink flower? Green pod or brown? This will tell me if I need a sweater.

If the fields are covered in milkweed flowers, here is summer’s height. Past the fervor of solstice, warmer languid days, with autumn still far off. I know how quickly to walk, I know to still expect a warbler here and there, I know there are still plenty of swimming days left. If the flowers are gone and the pods are green, then perhaps the nights are chilly. There may be back-to-school sales, and the Virginia creeper might be flushing scarlet, and the sumac too, just at their tips. An errant leaf aflame. But the days are still warm and slow. Brown pods, though, and the crows are calling more insistently. The thrushes have probably left, with most of the warblers. It’s still robins, and the goldfinches will dominate.

Use your ears, too, they can tell time. Stand under a silver maple or a cottonwood. Do they whisper? Rustle? Rattle? Your chosen onomatopoeia will let me know. If the cottonwood downright clacks I I’ll be eating macouns. When the crickets slow to a stop, and the robins are absent in the lengthening evening, it’s time for vests, maybe a hat, and I ought to remember to put the scraper in the car, because there’s certainly morning frost. The full moons have names that situate one in place in addition to time, but so could every individual crescent or new moon or waning gibbous.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

un-knowing, and putting the guidebooks down


Last night I mistook buttercups for fireflies, in the gray twilight in the meadow. Bright despite approaching dark, my mind drew an unexpected map. This error was error not in being, but only in light and unmattering category. Mistaken sight is sight, and often illuminating (this is the work of metaphor, to complicate or cross the assumptions of regularly worn pathways, to undo habit and inspire seeing).  In early May I took up my field guides and binoculars again, and for a week or so I did not go anywhere without them. There is so much to find and file, to seek and name. Quickly, though, I started to leave them behind.

The paradox of knowing and understanding is cloudy. This past year I’ve read and written less than I have in a very long time. Perhaps it’s simple dormancy, but there’s something inside that wishes to shed instead of add. The arc of learning is long, and the stages are hard to see except from a distance.

Some of the best birding advice I’ve read was, interestingly, to put down the books and just keep looking. There are times on walks that I wish I knew less, despite the relative little I know. To sink into presence, to still the wheeling of mental classification, which requires distance from the current phenomenon in order to plumb my memory stores.

Like the Christmas tree. Glasses on, the details of the ornaments and individual lights are clear, each readily identifiable. Glasses off, it becomes a radiating whole, boundaries are let go and the whole merry thing sings to you at once.

Besides the bliss ignorance of, say, invasive species would bring, I often wish I could blur the scenes I walk through in order to see more clearly. To stand like the cottonwood, who cannot name a warbler, its toes in the riverbank and arms in the sun. To have the wind empty me of what is inconsequential. Leaving space, becoming the reed who sings not of beauty but is sung through, without name.

Friday, May 16, 2014

going to parties in spring with birds


This morning is the first gray, stormy morning of the year – humid wind turning new kelly leaves upside-down, tiny songbirds with ruffled feathers surfing on wild branches. It’s an electric exhilaration I didn’t know I missed so much.

There are a whole host of things – words, experiences, memories, feelings – I haven’t realized I’ve missed while in the depths of winter’s dormancy. The months of this long, cold winter and late spring have left both the internal and external sap slow to rise. There are, of course, lessons to be learned in the wait of winter, including the understanding that to a tree or hibernating woodchuck the very experience of waiting depends upon a conception of future itself (what would it be like to live entirely in the present? To unfold daily, to simply respond accordingly to one’s surroundings?).

But now everything is springing, and soon will all have sprung. I wrote before that fall is a verb, and so is spring. The action is fast, cascading, accelerating every single day. The world changes before our eyes. We are on the inhale of the year. In a week we went from bud to leaf (days in the high seventies were a help), in two days the purple dame’s rocket took over the trailsides. The fruit trees blossomed and went to leaf, the nettles are up, and succulent little jewelweed cotyledons are out just this morning. And the birds!

All these somersaulting changes lead me to understand that the only way one could possibly witness this rapid unfolding is by looking. In the same place. Every day. The past decade or so has been mind-bogglingly peripatetic for me, as it is for many people in their twenties, especially people engaged in seasonal work.  There is value to breadth of experience, but more and more I’m appreciating depth, the clearer understanding that comes with staying. We’ve been in the same place now for a whopping seventeen months, the longest I’ve lived anywhere. But you can learn a lot in that time, especially if you happen to have a dog.

Daily, repeated walks are a gift and a tutor. Every day, at the same time, we walk the trail by the brook that runs into the Winooski, bordered by boxelder, dogwood, and willow (as well as the invasive goutweed and knotweed). While somewhat suburban, it’s also thriving bird habitat. Here is where I get to experience the rush of spring at its height. For the past month, every two days or so I get to welcome a new resident. First the robins, then the grackles and blackbirds, next the ever-present song sparrow, with its song that sounds like dial-up internet. Next came the flycatchers, the phoebe and the peewee, timed, of course, to the explosion of flying insects. A week and a half ago I started hearing the ‘tsee-tsee-TSEE-o!’ of the American redstart (a showy bird I can almost never see). Finally, four days ago, the yellow warbler showed up (sweet sweet sweet little more sweet), and, yesterday, the common yellowthroat, with its smashing black mask and witchity-witchity song. It feels like a crescendo - one I would not be able to experience if I hadn't been present throughout the entirety of the song so far. I feel like a hostess as some great gathering, whose doorbell keeps ringing with new arrivals. It’s a lovely feeling, and one that brings celebration and great relief. 

Because, I mean, after that winter, I think we do deserve a party. And birds are very entertaining guests.