Today saw the arrival of a pair of Baltimore orioles, male and female. Of course, we promptly rehung the grape jelly feeder, which was immediately visited by a gray squirrel and a couple of black-capped chickadees. Meanwhile. the orioles were enjoying sipping from the nectar feeder. At the moment, a male oriole is feeding on the grape jelly and a hummingbird has whipped in to grab a quick drink from the nectar feeder. It would probably be helpful if I separated the feeders along the railing rather than keep them all where I can watch from my napping writing chair.
male Baltimore oriole feeding on grape jelly
Photo by J. Harrington
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Sometime between now and Memorial Day, we might get lucky enough to be visited by scarlet tanagers. Dragon flies should be in evidence by then, too. We've not yet done any tilling for the three sisters garden we're hoping to grow this summer. Maybe in a week or so we'll feel up to it. Meanwhile, we'll keep watching the birds and collecting the ticks the dogs are bringing into the house this year and leaving on the furniture. We caught another one, tick, not dog, crawling up our arm this morning.
Ballad of Orange and Grape
After you finish your workafter you do your dayafter you've read your readingafter you've written your say –you go down the street to the hot dog stand,one block down and across the way.On a blistering afternoon in East Harlem in the twentiethcentury.Most of the windows are boarded up,the rats run out of a sack –sticking out of the crummy garageone shiny long Cadillac;at the glass door of the drug-addiction center,a man who'd like to break your back.But here's a brown woman with a little girl dressed in roseand pink, too.Frankfurters frankfurters sizzle on the steelwhere the hot-dog-man leans –nothing else on the counterbut the usual two machines,the grape one, empty, and the orange one, empty,I face him in between.A black boy comes along, looks at the hot dogs, goes onwalking.I watch the man as he stands and poursin the familiar shapebright purple in the one marked ORANGEorange in the one marked GRAPE,the grape drink in the machine marked ORANGEand orange drink in the GRAPE.Just the one word large and clear, unmistakeable, on eachmachine.I ask him : How can we go on readingand make sense out of what we read? –How can they write and believe what they're writing,the young ones across the street,while you go on pouring grape in ORANGEand orange into the one marked GRAPE –?(How are we going to believe what we read and we writeand we hear and we say and we do?)He looks at the two machines and he smilesand he shrugs and smiles and pours again.It could be violence and nonviolenceit could be white and black women and menit could be war and peace or anybinary system, love and hate, enemy, friend.Yes and no, be and not-be, what we do and what we don'tdo.On a corner in East Harlemgarbage, reading, a deep smile, rape,forgetfulness, a hot street of murder,misery, withered hope,a man keeps pouring grape into ORANGEand orange into the one marked GRAPE,pouring orange into GRAPE and grape into ORANGE forever.
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