Once again, things were very quiet at the South Pond. I left
Mucho at home this time, to see if there might be more signs of life without
the sight or smell of my big, hairy beast. When I first arrived, there were a
few crows around, as there were last week. One was pecking at something on the
ground. After it (is there a way to identify sex?) flew away, I went to see
what the bird was trying to eat. It was a shred of food wrapper. Crows must be
like the starlings Lisa Knopp writes about in her Lexicon from The Nature of
Home. She says starlings will nest anywhere, eat anything. This must be true of
crows. They seem hardy and clever, able to adapt. In fact, a quick Google
search on crows turns up an article from Cracked.com, a favored information
source for America’s youth (at least the youth I live with), about the ways
crows are smarter than we think. Their No. 1 strength: adaptability. They study
human behavior; they memorize the garbage pick-up schedule. Knopp says
starlings will inherit the earth. I think the crows might.
Last week the ice was still and silent. This week, because
we had two days of warm weather, the ice was thinner with little round holes of
open water, as if bubbles had popped through the ice. Because of the openings,
I could hear the water move below the ice. Donuts of air formed under the holes,
then disappeared. Watching the slow, shifting movement was like watching a lava
lamp, kind of mesmerizing.
| Holes in the ice |
I’ve started to think a lot about the difference between the
South and North Ponds. Over the weekend, I walked with Henry to the North Pond.
It was busy with activity, maybe because it was slightly warmer. We could see
animal tracks across the snowy surface of the pond—rabbit tracks, and what we
suspect were coyote tracks. Two groups (gaggles?) of geese gathered in the open
water over the aerators, generating lots of noise as they swam and fed. We met
a bird watcher, who pointed out several small birds in the trees around the
pond. He said in order to see birds, you should stare at one point and look for
movement in your peripheral vision. He showed us the bird feeders at the Nature
Museum (at the south end of the pond), and named several species of birds that
feed there. I recognized a woodpecker, only because of the pecking. He also pointed
out two European geese who live with the Canada geese. They have orange beaks
and lighter coloring. Plus, some mallards and ducks milled about. Mallards, he
said, will mate with anything. What at first looked like a homogenous group was
actually pretty mixed. And, apparently, a little promiscuous. As we left, I
noticed some of the geese biting ice at the edge of the open water. Were they
eating it? Trying to make the opening larger?
| Geese and ducks at North Pond |
I think you're right about crows :-) Did you know they are capable of skilled tool-making? And they also memorize individual human faces (so don't make one mad, because they hold grudges and share their dislike with all their friends...).
ReplyDeleteThe photo of the pond, and the discussion of the contrast between the two places within the same park, is striking. Definitely something worth thinking more on. I also like here that you're considering the ice again, which is lending a nice continuity between entries.