Getting Outside Saturday: The Coming Season(s)
categories: Cocktail Hour
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Soon enough I will be putting on my Cassandra Wig again. Soon it will be time to return to yelling “The world is doomed!” Soon…..
But for now I need a rest. Being an Eco Prophet is tough work, and frustrating work as this week’s convention shows. In writing their Big Story, the Dems got the plot pretty much right, and most of the characters, good and evil, but they forgot all about the setting. Barely a mention of the environment. As if there were no stage for all the dramas they described, as if the world took place without an earth.
Oh well. The earth will have the last laugh soon enough. In the meantime, as the President takes a brief post-convention rest, I will take my own. A break from those tried and true topics: doom and gloom. Instead I find myself focusing on two seasons that I am very much looking forward to. The first is the pro football season, and I go into it dreaming that this will be the year my Pats win that fourth title (ideally by beating the accursed Giants and the oh-so-lucky Eli Manning.). For that season I will prepare by cleaning the pollen off my TV screen and stocking up on beer (Ranger is my current preferred brand) and potato chips (Cape Cod, of course).
The second season I’m anticipating is every bit as dramatic, and requires equally minimal preparation on my part: just grabbing my binoculars and bird books. I am talking, of course, about the migratory season. Every year it stirs me. And maybe it stirs you a little, too. I think of sights I’ve seen. Swallows staging on Cape Cod, a great tornado of birds in our backyard readying for their long trip south, during which their numbers continue to swell to the thousands. Sea turtles, mostly invisible, except when they wait to long and land cold-stunned on the shore. Raptors pouring over Hawk Mountain as the expert birders, who reminded me of gunsligners, called out the names of the birds while to me they were no more than dots on the horizon.
The year I best felt the drama of this movement south was the year I went with the birds. In 2006 I followed the osprey migration south from Cape Cod down through the states to Cuba and then Venezuela and back. I learned some things that year. That all our places are linked together, your backyard tied to mine. That through a world that is increasingly digitalized, segmented, fenced off and pre-programed, there flows a primal spectacle, an ancient and organic adaptation to a world that was and still is. And that there was something in that spectacle that spoke to something in me, in a way just as stirring but a little different than the NFL did.
This year I will not be traveling to Cuba to follow the migration, but that doesn’t matter. The great thing about migration is that it comes to you. It jumps from your backyard to mine so all you have to do is go outside and look around. In this way you become part of the larger process, and begin to understand that your home may be your home but to the birds it is just a stopover, a single link in a great chain.
Which gets me to thinking about broken links in that chain. Which of course invites doom and gloom back in…..
So feel free to stop here if you want to keep upbeat. I promised after all. But for those ready to go to a slightly darker place, I’ll paste this in from the end of my book about the Cuba year, Soaring with Fidel:
As Venezuela goes, so go the birds.
That sounds nice, but what does it mean? It means that with a phenomenon like migration you can’t just conserve a place, you need to conserve a process. The flyways that migrating birds follow cross state and national lines, and the birds depend on many stops along the way. And so as Venezuela goes, as Cuba goes, as Cape Cod goes, as Carolina goes, so go the birds. If Fidel Castro, say, or Jeb Bush declared osprey hunting legal, or even encouraged it, in their respective provinces, then you would wipe out not just the Floridian and Cuban birds, but the Venezuelan and New England birds too.
Which makes us all responsible, all linked by the chain of migration. Just like DDT. While the banning of DDT was a great environmental victory in the United States, ospreys still gather the deadly chemical in their lymphatic systems each year. This is because the same victories did not occur in Latin America and the chemical, like the birds, does not respect international borders. Though we often seem loathe to admit it, the fact that our country is part of a larger world is undeniable.
Migration is the real world wide web, the closest thing that nature has to connecting the entire planet. “Bird migration is the one truly unifying phenomenon in the world,” writes Scott Weidensaul in Living on the Wind, “stitching the continents together in a way that even the great weather systems, which roar out from the poles but fizzle at the equator, fail to do.” But if the stitches are ripped in one place, the whole is easily torn.
First morning here with jacket. End-of-summer-time. Crickets in the musty shadows. The sheen gone off the leaves. The sun’s angle changed. Keats’ “season of mist and mellow fruitlfulness” is on the way.
We finally got the “cold” weather here this morning. No humidity. Flannel short weather. Thank god. Heading down to the shack to write.
P.S. Wofford is my new favorite college football team.