Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Approaching a new year

At least two of the past three days, a hawk has stooped on the birds at our feeder. With the bitter cold, we had bigger crowds than usual. The first time all I saw was a dark shadow promptly followed by the disappearance of the songbirds and woodpeckers. This morning I saw the dark gray(?) back of what I think was a peregrine, but it may have been a different species, perched on the feeder hanger. After a quick Google check, I took down the feeders. The reasoning is the birds will disperse and the hawk will move on to more promising hunting territories. Someone neglected to brief the songbirds. They’re all over the deck looking for the feeders. If we continue to have crowds on the deck, I figure I may as well put the feeders back up. We’ll see how it goes tomorrow.

bird tracks make for slim pickings for hawks
bird tracks make for slim pickings for hawks
Photo by J. Harrington

We took advantage of yesterday’s and today’s warmer weather to get some of the rough edges of the driveway cleaned up and much of the road snow droppings scraped and brushed off of the garage floor. Only 83 days until spring equinox next year. Snow season in our North Country extends well beyond that but by that time of season it melts pretty quick, usually.

The bulbs in the planter I got for Christmas seem to like their new home. The soil is beginning to swell and a couple of teeny, tiny shoots of green are barely visible. It’s very pleasing to have a spouse who frequently knows what I want and need better than I do. I’m looking forward to a taste of spring before we get close to the real thing.


New Year's Poem


The Christmas twigs crispen and needles rattle
Along the window-ledge.
             A solitary pearl
Shed from the necklace spilled at last week’s party
Lies in the suety, snow-luminous plainness
Of morning, on the window-ledge beside them.   
And all the furniture that circled stately
And hospitable when these rooms were brimmed
With perfumes, furs, and black-and-silver
Crisscross of seasonal conversation, lapses
Into its previous largeness.
             I remember   
Anne’s rose-sweet gravity, and the stiff grave
Where cold so little can contain;
I mark the queer delightful skull and crossbones
Starlings and sparrows left, taking the crust,
And the long loop of winter wind
Smoothing its arc from dark Arcturus down
To the bricked corner of the drifted courtyard,
And the still window-ledge.
             Gentle and just pleasure
It is, being human, to have won from space
This unchill, habitable interior
Which mirrors quietly the light
Of the snow, and the new year.


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