The driveway today is about one third mud, one third ice, and one third puddles, with lots of overlap between the puddles and the ice. Not quite time yet to remove the Yak Trax. Water is flowing and seeping all over the places locally. The pond up the road should be open, if not ice free, sometime in the next week or ten days. As we drove through the Carlos Avery pond area this morning we looked for waterfowl but there were none to be seen yet. This anticipation makes me think of Wallace Stevens’ Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, especially V and VI, where today’s anticipation becomes tomorrow’s arrival.
red-winged blackbird, mid-March arrival
Photo by J. Harrington
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We’ve not yet seen any red-winged blackbirds this month but, then again, all we’ve done is quickly drive past their roosting areas so they may be here and we’ve just had bad timing. Or, they’re not here yet but soon will be. Spring-like weather arrived this year sort of all at once. Will spring migration follow suit? Are Wallace Stevens and Paul McCartney writing about the same kind of blackbird?
Our Leopold Phenology calendar notes that “Wood frogs begin calling and breeding the first day and night over 50 degrees.” We’ve reached daytime temperatures of 50℉ a couple of times recently. In a normal year we won’t reach overnight temperatures of 50℉ for another couple of months. Meanwhile, we can enjoy St. Patrick’s Day tomorrow and the Vernal Equinox on Saturday, when the daytime temperature is again forecast to exceed 50℉.
That’s it for today. We wish we had more to report but are ending up spending time doing necessary, although annoying, things like replacing the coffee maker. That trip shot most of this morning. May tomorrow be a better day!
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
IAmong twenty snowy mountains,The only moving thingWas the eye of the blackbird.III was of three minds,Like a treeIn which there are three blackbirds.IIIThe blackbird whirled in the autumn winds.It was a small part of the pantomime.IVA man and a womanAre one.A man and a woman and a blackbirdAre one.VI do not know which to prefer,The beauty of inflectionsOr the beauty of innuendoes,The blackbird whistlingOr just after.VIIcicles filled the long windowWith barbaric glass.The shadow of the blackbirdCrossed it, to and fro.The moodTraced in the shadowAn indecipherable cause.VIIO thin men of Haddam,Why do you imagine golden birds?Do you not see how the blackbirdWalks around the feetOf the women about you?VIIII know noble accentsAnd lucid, inescapable rhythms;But I know, too,That the blackbird is involvedIn what I know.IXWhen the blackbird flew out of sight,It marked the edgeOf one of many circles.XAt the sight of blackbirdsFlying in a green light,Even the bawds of euphonyWould cry out sharply.XIHe rode over ConnecticutIn a glass coach.Once, a fear pierced him,In that he mistookThe shadow of his equipageFor blackbirds.XIIThe river is moving.The blackbird must be flying.XIIIIt was evening all afternoon.It was snowingAnd it was going to snow.The blackbird satIn the cedar-limbs.
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