Thursday, August 11, 2022

So, it’s a full moon tonight

Tonight is a full moon. The Ojibwe call it Berry Moon; the Lakota, Harvest. Tomorrow night is the Perseids Meteor Shower. Unfortunately, the local forecast is dominated by rain and cloudiness both tonight and tomorrow night. So, enjoy the picture below, of a full August moon from nine years ago.

full moon, August 2013
full moon, August 2013
Photo by J. Harrington

The latest issue of Trout magazine arrived yesterday. Much of it is about women and fly-fishing and conservation. I’m more please with what Trout Unlimited is doing these days than I am with many of the other conservation organizations I support. Follow the link above and take a look around. I think you’ll find it worthwhile and it may even prompt you to consider joining.

   You probably aren’t aware that this year is the 50th anniversary of the publication of Limits to Growth. As might be expected, there’s a variety of analyses regarding the prescience of the initial computer model outputs. This one, from the journal nature, is helpful. One of the things I most like about the direction in which Trout Unlimited is moving is it appears to encompass many of the critical elements of living with the complex systems of planetary life without excessively stressing them, all the while emphasizing enjoying what nature offers. We, and our home planet, need more of that. Alice Oswald could just as well be speaking of Earth when she writes “And what she's really after is you to love her.” 


Full-Length Portrait of the Moon


She could be any woman at all, 
caught off-guard on-guard. 
With her hands stroking or strangling and maybe 
with her intentions half-interred. 
But she is as she is. Her gaze is always 
filing away at its cord. 
And what she's really after 
is you to love her. 

She forgets who she is. 
She could be so small 
she almost has no smell. 
She feels like anyone at all. 
When you walk up to her, 
she keeps quite still, 
but what she answers to 
is never loud enough to know. 

Eaten away by outwardness, 
her eyes are empty. 
They could be watching you 
or not. They work indifferently, 
like lit-up glass and if you ask 
why she won't speak, why should she? 
When what she really wants 
is silence. 

You know what women are like: 
Kay, Moira, Sandra. 
They move through a dark room, 
peering round under 
the hoods of their names. 
Alcestis, Clytemnestra. 
She could be either of those. 
She scarcely knows. 
She goes on thinking something 
just over your shoulder. 
This could be the last night 
before you lose her. 
But what's the use 
of saying one thing or another. 
When what she's really after 
is you to love her.


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Please be kind to each other while you can.

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