Sunday, April 7, 2013

For the Chickadees: This Must Be the Place


What a difference two weeks makes. The pond has shaken itself free of the snow and ice and gray that has blanketed it for months. More birds have arrived. The geese still patrol the island, along with some gulls. No more herons, or at least there weren’t any when I went this week. And a group of about five turtles sat on a big rock just off the island. How long have they been awake?

Many more humans have arrived as well. I brought Henry and Stella with me, since it was so nice out. All winter when I visited the pond, the other people I saw were usually alone, usually quiet. On this sunny afternoon, the boardwalk was full of families, couples and lots of other dogs. And Stella spotted some fish.
Spring is sprung


We entered by the former boathouse. Right away, Henry and Stella spotted toy in the water—one of those hollow plastic zoo souvenirs. The bright green ape floated on his back close enough to the sidewalk that my kids thought they could reach in and pick it up. When they couldn’t grab it, they spent some time looking for a stick to push it into the tall pond grass, where they thought they’d be able to grab it. But there were  no sticks around. So we walked on.

Under the pedestrian bridge, I showed them the mud on the beams, put there so barn swallows can build nests. “Do you think someone throws that up there?” Stella asked. They must. “That would be a fun job,” she said.

We planned to stay for only 20 minutes. Everyone had homework. But once we were there, it was hard to leave. We walked the entire half-mile boardwalk then stopped in the pavilion to take photos.

As I’ve been blogging about the boardwalk, so has the zoo staff. Their most recent entry says the birdfeeders I spotted last time I was at the pond are not actually feeders. They’re meant to be homes for black-capped chickadees. Like woodpeckers and nuthatches, chickadees are cavity-nesting birds. Many birds have returned to the pond since the renovation, such as red-winged blackbirds and house finches. But cavity-nesting birds don’t have as many opportunities to find homes where the trees are healthy and thriving—not as many cavities. So the zoo hung nesting boxes, with openings that are too small for sparrows, one of the chickadees’ main housing competitors. The zoo hopes that starting this year, migrating chickadees will like the boardwalk as well as the herons and geese do.

4 comments:

  1. Lori,
    I haven't checked in for a while. I love the simplicity, the ease, the lightness of your observations. They are so elegant and graceful. they are paired down to the essences and display a deep simplicity that gives us direct access to your essential expressions. I love the parts with your children. I went on a late afternoon hike with my daughter and there is something indescribable...something...well... just special in the uneventfulness of sharing with your kids. I also appreciate the mini-lessons that you provide for us on birds and the like. Your blog encapsulates all that a good blog should. Its ease and entertainment are paramount. They make me feel human. a beautiful way to end the day and shut down the computer. Nice job and thanks.

    Marc

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  2. "Many more humans have arrived as well. I brought Henry and Stella with me, since it was so nice out. All winter when I visited the pond, the other people I saw were usually alone, usually quiet. On this sunny afternoon, the boardwalk was full of families, couples and lots of other dogs. And Stella spotted some fish."

    This must be a week for visiting our spaces with company! i just commented on Daeja's blog who also visited her space with a little one.

    I so enjoy reading your blog week after week. There is such beautiful, insightful, and lasting reflection that I cannot get enough of. Like many of your previous blogs I appreciate how you notice the tension between the urban and the wild and you swing it in a new and original way each time: "We entered by the former boathouse. Right away, Henry and Stella spotted toy in the water—one of those hollow plastic zoo souvenirs. The bright green ape floated on his back close enough to the sidewalk that my kids thought they could reach in and pick it up."

    I also appreciate how you incorporate the factual with the figurative. I always learn something when leaving your blog posts, which is something I admire in your writing.

    Thank you,

    Marguerite

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  3. I'm going to sound repetitive here - what I get for getting so behind in commenting - but this entry, as Marc & Marguerite have said, really encapsulates why this is such an effective portrayal of this place: we're learning so much about it but it's all filtered through the lens of your own (and this time, your kids') experiences. Those are always so well integrated and work well to fully illuminate this place.

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  4. "We planned to stay for only 20 minutes. Everyone had homework. But once we were there, it was hard to leave."

    Lori, I love the simplicity of this because it states the problem but it also shows us how time outside on a beautiful day can lead to a wonderful delinquency. I agree with Marguerite that the way you incorporate the factual with the figurative is wonderful. Thanks for a lovely post on your pond.

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