Late yesterday two whitetail deer poked their way along the edge of the woods behind the house. First whitetail sightings of the year on our property. This morning a couple of hen wild turkeys pecked at the seed droppings underneath the deck bird feeders. Later, a flock of about a dozen turkeys followed in the tracks left by the deer. First turkey sightings of the year on our property.
whitetails at a sunflower seed feeder a few years ago
Photo by J. Harrington
|
We saw one of the deer stop and browse on a young cedar tree. Last autumn’s acorn crop was close to nonexistent around here so I can’t begin to guess what the turkeys are feeding on and how they’re getting through a foot or so of mixed snow and ice cover. Ground hog day falls about midway through astronomical winter. We’re already past the midpoint of meteorological winter but March 1 doesn’t often resemble anything like actual spring here in the North Country. Late winter, early spring, is a hungry time for the wild animals that don’t have access to a bird feeder refilled by a two-legged animal.
To get to a fresh food supply, most animals have to survive during the next couple of months. The sightings of the past 24 hours were a treat. I hope we get a better, complete, thaw soon and that winter’s toll is limited this year, although that may well mean a hunger season for the scavengers of the woods and fields. Spring is a new beginning only for those who make it ’til then.
Hunger Moon
By Jane Cooper
The last full moon of February stalks the fields; barbed wire casts a shadow.Rising slowly, a beam moved toward the weststealthily changing positionuntil now, in the small hours, across the snowit advances on my pillowto wake me, not rudely like the sunbut with the cocked gun of silence.I am alone in a vast roomwhere a vain woman once slept.The moon, in pale buckskins, croucheson guard beside her bed.Slowly the light wanes, the snow will meltand all the fences thrum in the spring breezebut not until that sleeper, trappedin my body, turns and turns.
********************************************
Thanks for visiting. Come again when you can.
Please be kind to each other while you can.
No comments:
Post a Comment