Archive for nature

Is It A Leaf, or — ?

Late Wednesday afternoon, I noticed a dark smudge in the lower right corner on the outside of one of the kitchen windows.  “Those painters were careless,”  was my first thought: several years ago, the house had been painted with dark brown trim, and smudges had been left at the edges of some of the windows.  Then by the next morning, I realized that if I hadn’t noticed a smudge for several years in that exact spot, it must be something new, and besides, it was clearly a solid object: through the glass, it looked rather like a rolled-up brown leaf — it had been windy lately — maybe a leaf had blown up to the window, and got caught in an old cobweb. 

But then, I began to worry: maybe it was something else, like a bat.  A strange place for a bat to sleep — they usually seek out more secluded places, not a relatively out in the open windowsill.  If it was a bat, it might be a sick one.  I was determined to get a look at whatever-it-was from outdoors, since I couldn’t tell exactly what it might be from indoors: but I had errands to run, and appointments to keep, so by the time I got a chance to look at the mysterious leaflike object, it was late Thursday afternoon.  I stepped around to the back of the house to look.

And that was when I had a Homer Simpson-like slap-the-forehead moment: for it was, of course, a moth.   A large silk moth, with closed wings, was clinging to the window frame — looking closer, I saw that it was a male Polyphemus ( the males have large feathery golden antennae).  The weather has been so cold lately: really too cold for moths, at least too cold for them to fly.  The moth must have emerged from its oakleaf-covered cocoon too early, at least for this unusually chilly spring; then it had to find a place to rest, and wait for warmer weather. 

It was not the first time I had seen a Polyphemus on that kitchen window.  Years ago, late one summer evening, my mother and I had been washing dishes (the sink is below the window, looking out on the backyard).  It was a warm night, and the windows were wide open.   Suddenly a large brown moth swooped in, flattening itself against the inside of the open window, wings splayed partly across the glass, partly across the wood frame along its lower edge.   (We could tell it was a Polyphemus by the large blue eye spots on each hind wing.)  “Why would it do that?” Mother wondered.   In a moment, her question was answered: a screech owl whooshed past, the arc of its flight carrying it very close to the house.  Clearly the moth had hidden from the owl.  The moth stayed there, not moving, for quite some time: Mother complained that she hoped the moth would leave soon, since she wanted to close the windows before everyone went to bed.  After about an hour, the moth left, and we were able to close the windows.

I had not seen a moth this large near the house for many years.  Large silk moths are sadly becoming rare, for many reasons.  This moth, clinging to the outside of the kitchen window in the cold, seemed content to keep still, waiting: though I could tell it had moved slightly when I looked at it again later, it stayed in much the same place for several days.  Yesterday, at last, the weather grew warmer: early this morning, Sunday, I looked out, and was not surprised to find that the moth was gone.  I wish him good luck in encountering others of his species.    

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Spring Preview

The cardinal drops his liquid notes into the mists of morning, fog over snow.  It was warm yesterday (in the thirties), it will be warmer today: yesterday I was surprised to see how much snow had melted, surprised to see dark dampened grass on hillsides where the snowbanks had receded.  The ground has been covered with a deep blanket of white for so long that I’d forgotten what was under it — I forgot that pile of wood was there, I forgot about the fallen-over dead thistles.  Maybe they’re something I’d rather not see, yet — it’s not yet time for spring, especially in this year’s long winter — maybe, by the time all the snow is gone, it will be warm enough to work outside.  So many years recently, spring has caught me unprepared: I didn’t start seeds indoors early enough, I end up planting them in the ground instead since I didn’t get that jump-start on gardening.  I’ve vowed that’s not going to happen this year! — Maybe the long winter will help me out — give me time to get growing.

The fog is gone, and now the sky is clear.  Two sunny days in a row — that’s something we haven’t seen in a long time.  Yesterday it was so good to feel the sun’s warmth, even indoors: it was good to see the sunlight forming bright rectangles on the floor as it spilled through the skylights in the library.  Outside the college, people were walking, stopping to talk in small groups — they seemed to be trying to find a reason to stay outdoors — when for so many weeks, no one could stay outside for long.  I found I was starting to  remember what summer was like: I looked across campus and imagined the marsh turning green again, birds flying over.  Today, the birds are more active here, flitting from tree to tree — even more active than yesterday.  Tomorrow another snowstorm is predicted, and winter may settle down again.  Today is a welcome reprieve. 

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Winter As Fairyland

Less than two weeks ago, I was enraptured by winter.  A foggy morning after a night of snow revealed what seemed to be an enchanted landscape: the snow had accumulated to a depth of several inches on the tree branches, giving the appearance of elaborate icing on a cake straight out of fairyland.  Once again I was aware of that phenomenon I had noticed in previous winters: that so much snow on the branches gives them the look of being in foliage, white instead of green.  We are in the midst of an old-fashioned, snowy winter; the sort of winter we have not had in many years.  I reveled in the sweep of sparkling snow covering the ground, the way it crunched underfoot, the long blue shadows of morning or evening. 

But now I’m heartily tired of it.  The snow falls every day, adding to what is already there, so that its depth can now be measured in feet, rather than in inches.  That’s not really the bad part.  What I’m tired of is the cold: the below-zero stuff.  At first it’s fun — bundling up, walking briskly against the wind, feeling a sense of having successfully battled the elements once you’re indoors again.  For a few days each winter, it’s something to look forward to, even welcome.  When it happens over and over again, though, it reaches the point where enough is enough.  Temperatures in the twenties would be great just now.

The most hopeful thing I can think of right now is something that’s happening in the distant desert southwest: “Pitchers and catchers report today.”  The days are getting longer.  Winter won’t last forever.  Spring — and baseball — is coming.      

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Almost Winter

It is almost winter; snow has been on the ground for days.  The autumn lasted so long that the trees which didn’t lose their leaves before the sudden cold at the beginning of December are losing them now: brown, dried leaves loosened by the wintry blasts have been sent skipping across the snow, where they look incongruous, misplaced in seasons, dark sepia against a stark white background. 

Now, for a few days, the onset of winter has eased: last night rain was falling, and by morning some of the snow had melted.  Last week I filled the chickadee feeder: ever since then, there’s been an increase in bird activity; not just chickadees, but cardinals, whitethroats, a downy woodpecker, and blue jays.  Every time I see a blue jay these days, I cheer: they used to be so common, but in the past few years they have been utterly decimated by West Nile virus.  It’s good to see them back.

My college class took up so much time: though I learned so much, I barely had enough time to write anything, except for class — let alone get anything else done.  The first class in the library program is over now!  It’s almost the holidays.  Maybe I’ll finally get around to making that pumpkin pie!

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

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Winter Approaches

Last week I was driving past a large corporate campus when I smelled smoke.   At first I thought, “What’s on fire?” and then I realized the smoke had a distinctive fragrance: it could only be a prairie burning.  But how late in the year for a prairie burn!   I parked at a nearby building, and when I got out of my car, that marvelous smell was even stronger.   The burn must have been at the far west end of the campus: I couldn’t even see the smoke.  Just to know it was going on, though, gave a huge lift to my spirits.  As I walked away from my car, I felt a wonderful nostalgia for my prairie-burning college days.   

Later, a woman I knew in the office building I was in complained that someone was burning leaves.  “Oh, no,” I said, “ burning leaves stink.  The way it smells, they’re burning a prairie.”  Then she said, “Oh, yeah!  When I drove by, I saw they were doing a controlled burn!”  We talked a bit about burning prairies: I said they ought to burn the little patches of prairie near our building; then she mentioned that she’d like to plant something like that on some land her family owns.  I gave her some information on how to get help finding out how to plant native landscapes, where to buy prairie plants, etc. (how cool, possibly a new convert to more natural landscaping!). 

This week, I found out they didn’t burn those little prairie patches near us, which so badly needed it: they have been poorly maintained, and are full of weeds.  They are very small; maybe they’ll burn them in the spring, or give them a once-over mowing: I hope so.  A few times in the summer, I heard a field sparrow calling when I walked through the parking lot for our building.  I hope some of the corporate campus prairie plantings are big enough, or contiguous enough, for them to nest, but I’m not sure. 

Now winter approaches, and snow is coming; there was some over the weekend, which didn’t all melt, and today more is expected: possibly a lot more.  The summery weather went on so long, the leaves changed so much later than usual, and then suddenly it was cold; it got cold so fast there was no time to get used to it this year.  Too late for burning prairies now.   

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Pumpkin Pie

What a gray day — how typical of mid-November.  It’s about time: the leaves at last are falling.  The scarlet leaves of the white oak (not as brilliant a scarlet this year as they have been sometimes) are all gone, as of last week; the scarlet leaves of the young red oak (which never turned that bright of a color before) are beginning to fade, and fall.  Even the alien honeysuckles are finally turning: their green-too-long leaves have paled to chartreuse. 

And it’s raining.  I drove through the drizzling mist this morning to go grocery-shopping — probably the last bit of food-shopping I’ll be able to afford in a while.  Ah well, it was nice while it lasted.  But anyway — I went to the store this morning on a quest: to buy the remaining ingredients I’ll need to make a pumpkin pie.  As I pushed my cart through the aisles, I was surprised to find that I felt like a kid on Christmas morning: despite the headache I was trying to fight off, despite the dismal weather.  I realized there was a song in my heart, and the words to the song were, “I’m going to make a pumpkin pie, I’m going to make a pumpkin pie, I’m going to make a pumpkin pie….”  How many years, after all, has it been since I’ve made a pumpkin pie?  I can’t remember.  I got all excited about making one when, a few weeks ago, I saw a new recipe for one demonstrated on a noontime news show.  The ones I made never worked out well before; and they were always too bland, when I wanted more spicy.  When they showed how to make this one, I thought, oh, I can do that!  That’s easy!  It’s also promised not to be bland – then, I surprised myself by actually taking the trouble to print out the recipe.  So, my trip to the store was a success: and now, for the first time in a long time, I have to make the darn pie!

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The Time Change

This morning we switched back to standard time.  I don’t like waiting another week to make the change — when daylight saving time ends, I’m glad for the brief two weeks of early morning light, until that too is gone, lost to the increasing hours of darkness.  Changing later means less morning light.  I must confess I am a lark — a naturally early riser — one of the few.  This has been going on for almost as long as I can remember: when I was four years old, I would get up at 5AM to watch “Popeye” and “Mighty Mouse”. 

Of course it is easier to get up early when it’s light outside — especially in the springtime.  But at that time of year, I’m often up before dawn anyway; I tend to wake with the birds.  Their songs pull me out of bed.  Even in the fall, as the light lessens, the birds aren’t fooled.  The resident cardinals started calling at their usual time this morning — several minutes before sunrise — no matter the time on the clock.  They pay no attention to what silly humans do to their clocks.  I sometimes envy the birds for being able to live their lives on a more natural time: wake with the dawn, go to sleep as the sun sets. 

So I’m not happy with the time change happening later.  I have to remind myself, though, of a time when it was much worse: when the change back to standard time didn’t happen at all.  That was when Nixon decreed that daylight saving time should last year-round.  I remember walking west down our street on my way to high school each weekday morning: except for a few lights along the way, it was pitch-black.  The kids who went to the Catholic high school (I went to the public school) would pass me going east, on the way to their bus stop.  One of them was a good friend, and he and I would say hello as we passed each other.  When I told my mother about it, she thought it was very funny that we would be walking opposite directions to school in such darkness: “Like ships passing in the night,” she would laugh.  I didn’t find it amusing at all — it was dangerous crossing the highway to get to school from our neighborhood in the dark.  Luckily, that didn’t last long — after about a year, Congress changed the law, and daylight saving time went back to its usual schedule. 

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