Sunday, May 24, 2020

Spring's gains and losses #phenology

[UPDATE: we tardily wish Happy Birthday! πŸŽ‚πŸŽ‚πŸŽ‚ to Minnesota's own Robert Zimmerman! πŸ‘πŸ‘]

Between being retired and following the COVID-19 safety measures, we've not been driving as much as in former years. That might  account for our lack of turtle sightings this year. Or, perhaps the turtles egg-laying has been delayed? Anyway, we've missed the brief encounters this Spring that we've enjoyed most years by this time.

painted turtle crossing gravel road
painted turtle crossing gravel road
Photo by J. Harrington

Hoary puccoon has started to come into flower. Several online sources mention Native American uses of this plant, but I've found no mention of it in Mary Siisip Geniusz Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have to Do Is Ask | Anishinaabe Botanical Teachings.


hoary puccoon beginning to bloom
hoary puccoon beginning to bloom
Photo by J. Harrington

The pear tree blossoms' petals, like last Winter's snowflakes, have been lost to seasonal changes. The breezes of this past week disbursed them into the taller and still growing grass stems. In fact, about all the trees around the neighborhood have reached a stage of full leafout. There are few, if any, open spaces left in the treeline, but many trees like crab apples are still in flower. If wildflowers and trees were in bloom year round, would we then come to take their beauty for granted?

Without much expectation of success, this morning I once again set traps for pocket gophers. There are fresh mounds in several widely separated locations on the back slope. If I could train gophers to eat buckthorn roots, I'd consider it a fair trade, but the gophers prefer the more open country of our fields where there are no buckthorns. As far as I know, gophers serve a very limited ecological role and have destroyed numerous fruit trees we've planted plus, they seem responsible for the disappearance of several prairie wildflowers we've planted, such as pasque flowers. Although the local deer have killed half of our chokeberry bushes, at least deer offer occasional aesthetic pleasures. Pocket gophers are ugly and out of sight underground most of the time.

Ellen Bass


GOPHERS


I’ve tried to kill the gophers. On stained
knees, up to my elbows in their earthen
tunnels, setting the green toothed trap, my human
scent masked with anise oil, then sweetened
with leaves of the sweet potato vine my neighbor maintains
they can’t resist, a rodent version of caviar and champagne.
But the dead must do some arcane
transmission of wisdom to the living. They’ve eaten
every fleck of leaf, sprung each trap with cool disdain.
They’re marvels, miniature Charlemagnes. Then
suddenly, I hear it—like a tiny microphone’s hidden
under the dirt. You couldn’t mistake this blazon
for anything else, like Louis Armstrong singing
It’s a Wonderful World. But when
the little fists of four leaf clover begin
to tremble, I’m confused not to feel the thrill of the hunt, the cocaine
rush in my veins. I pick up the shovel—I’ve slain
them like this—a hose down the hole, then bash their brains,
but my will wanes. It seems pointless to kill one denizen
when there must be dozens taking the A-train,
just trying to get to Sugar Hill. Listen.
It’s not an Elizabeth Bishop fish thing.
It’s not Galway’s bear or Stafford’s deer on the mountain,
not Kunitz’s whale or Donald Hall’s paean,
scratching the jowls of a cooked pig. I look into the grainy
hole the gopher’s dug with his skinny
incisors, this corridor between
worlds, and it’s the sound that stops me. That unseen
small tearing of the roots on such a serene
morning. I’m watching the grass shiver. I’m leaning
over, straining to hear it again.




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Please be kind to each other while you can.

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