Posts Tagged ‘bird’
October 5, 2009
As recent posts may have indicated, I am in the mood for poetry. And today, having run across a most beautiful piece by one of my favorite poets, I felt obliged to share it here.
Vultures
Like large dark
lazy
butterflies they sweep over
the glades looking
for death,
to eat it,
to make it vanish,
to make of it the miracle:
resurrection. No one
knows how many
they are who daily
minister so to the grassy
miles, no one
counts how many bodies
they discover
and descend to, demonstrating
each time the earth’s
appetite, the unending
waterfalls of change.
No one,
moreover,
wants to ponder it,
how it will be
to feel the blood cool,
shapeliness dissolve.
Locked into
the blaze of our own bodies
we watch them
wheeling and drifting, we
honor them and we
loathe them,
however wise the doctrine,
however magnificent the cycles,
however ultimately sweet
the huddle of death to fuel
those powerful wings.
– Mary Oliver
Posted in Fauna, Groups, Individuals, Nature, People, Poetry, Readings, Rural, Urban | Tagged appetite, avian, bird, blaze, blood, body, butterfly, buzzard, carrion, change, cool, cycle, dark, day, Death, doctrine, drift, earth, eat, eater, fowl, fuel, glade, grassy, honor, lazy, loathe, lock, magnificent, Mary Oliver, mile, minister, miracle, poem, Poetry, resurrection, sweet, vanish, vulture, waterfall, wheel, wing, wise | Leave a Comment »
September 16, 2009
Early autumn is a wet time of year here. Rain-heavy clouds spin out of the North, West, South, and loosen their burdens before passing on. Sometimes the sky closes and the sun disappears for weeks on end. It can be a gloomy, grim time for those still hoping to cling to a bit more summer.
But I love it. Granted, the prolonged rain can be problematic and tiresome, and I do miss the sunshine, but it is so beautiful. Colors are deep and vibrant, washed clean by the rain and unbleached by the sun. It’s cool enough for a flannel shirt in the morning, a small fire in the evening, cups of hot tea and cocoa and steaming bowls at every meal. A light but incessant breeze soughs in the trees, and I am home. These sounds, smells, colors, conditions echo in my heart and settle with the well-worn comfort of old jeans. I am home.
Rain drips from the eaves, pecks on the roof like a flock of birds. Shallow puddles bleed out from the grass, fill the tracks of the driveway, huddle in small pockets on the sidewalks. Trees and bushes swing with the breeze, dance with a gray sky. It is both bleak and beautiful. And I love it.

Photo courtesy of Harshad Sharma.
Posted in Flora, Individuals, Nature, People, Rural, Urban | Tagged autumn, beauty, bird, bleak, bleed, breeze, bush, clean, cloud, cocoa, color, comfort, condition, cool, dance, distant, driveway, eave, echo, evening, fall, fire, flannel, flock, gloom, grass, grim, Harshad Sharma, heart, jeans, morning, North, pocket, puddle, rain, roof, sidewalk, sky, smell, sound, South, summer, sun, sunshine, tea, time, track, tree, vibrant, weather, West, wet, worn | Leave a Comment »
September 6, 2009
As promised, if later than I had planned, due to technical problems, a whole new post.
I’ve always enjoyed spending quiet time just soaking in a good evening. Watching a brilliant sunset, picking out the first stars, listening to the sounds of frogs, crickets, cicadas calling. My perch usually takes the shape of porch swing but I once spent a fantastic evening at a picnic table in the Midwest that rivals the best of them.
We drove miles down a dirt road to a small patch of rolling farm country and pasture land in the middle of Kansas. It had been hot that day, over 100`F, and we had covered many, many miles on a trip headed West in a car with no air conditioning. We stopped not long before sunset, seeking refuge in the shade of a group of small trees near a picnic table. A light breeze drew across the hillside and shallow valley below and I thought perhaps we had stumbled on a small piece of Heaven.
We moved the picnic table into the shade and ate a bite while birds stalked tiny prey in the grass and flew in looping patterns over the grassy field a few hundred feet away. Backlit by the sinking sun, they snapped insects out of the air and sang their successes. The tall grass below them and the bugs they sought burned golden in the sunset light, gilded brightly against a dark line of trees bounding the far side of the field. The breeze was cool, the air dry, and we sat in perfect comfort watching the show.
Just up the road, an old windmill creaked and bumped through its slow and deliberate revolutions. Cattle grazed in the surrounding pasture. From time to time they bawled and lowed and wandered to the tank below the windmill for a drink of water, water delivered from somewhere underground to a quiet Kansas pasture by workings that had weathered there for more years than I and my traveling companion had been alive. Its steady sound was as natural as a creek gurgling over cobbles. I found it unspeakably comforting.
As evening drew the shades and the birds and bugs found their homes for the night, we sat reversed on the seats, our backs propped against the tabletop, and trained our eyes farther upward. Constellations materialized in the clear evening sky. Bugs called in a low chorus from the grass and trees. The windmill creaked reassuringly. And we stayed up until after midnight talking about the world, our lives, and counting shooting stars.
We left early the next morning, dawn still caught in the dewey grasses. We had miles to turn. But I left a piece of my heart on that hillside, and I took a piece of Kansas with me when we went.
It’s the reason I love to travel. It’s a cornerstone of the hope I hold for myself and this world. It’s something pure and simple and beautiful, and I saw it. I didn’t just look at it with open eyes, I saw it. And every time I see a place, a person, an object, I am forever changed … usually for the better.
Posted in Fauna, Flora, Individuals, Nature, People, Rural | Tagged beautiful, bird, breeze, cattle, change, cicada, comfort, constellation, cool, country, cow, cricket, dawn, dirt, drive, dry, evening, farm, field, frog, gold, grass, gravel, heart, Heaven, hill, home, hope, hot, insect, Kansas, land, life, Midwest, miles, morning, night, pasture, picnic, porch swing, prey, pure, refuge, road, Rural, seat, see, shade, simple, sky, star, sun, sunset, table, tank, travel, tree, trip, valley, water, windmill, world | Leave a Comment »
July 25, 2009
That middle photo says it all: hope. Sometimes it’s hard to find when looking at the world around us, and even harder to hold onto once it’s found … but if you look hard enough, it’s there. Always has been and always will be.

My thanks to the Flickr members who supplied the photos: 1. Brewer’s Black Bird, 2. Hidden, 3. “The soul that sees beauty may sometimes walk alone.”, 4. ~ You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away (Thank You, Paul McCartney, John Lennon & Eddie Vedder), 5. {we are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars}, 6. hard worker, 7. flower black and white, 8. Natural Bridges Sunset, Black and White – Santa Cruz, California, 9. hidden
Posted in Flora, Individuals, Nature, People, Rural, Urban | Tagged beach, bird, black, bloom, flower, glass, gray, hands, hat, hide, hole, hope, island, jar, leaf, light, line, man, natural bridge, ocean, old, perch, petal, photo, sea, shadow, stair, stem, step, tide, view, water, wire, wrinkle | Leave a Comment »