Chokeberry |
First growth of Bloodroot |
One morning I walk out to a sunny but cold 27 degrees
Fahrenheit wondering if spring will ever come.
Today ceretainly won’t be the day I see anything to keep me from wishing
time would temporarily speed up just a little.
On a whim I crouch low to the ground in the front entrance bed. Lots of eaten acorns and hickory nut shells
lay on the ground. The squirrels have
been busy here too. A few acorns have
small holes where insects had made an entrance and perhaps camped out for the
winter. Wait, what’s this? It’s cold.
I can see my breath for Pete’s sake.
But there it is. A small shoot of
a Bloodroot has poked above the frozen ground.
And there’s another. Is this
right? It’s dang cold and the ground is
frozen. And there’s a few more little
spits of Bloodroot. My records indicate
that last year was a freakishly unusual 80 degrees around this date and these
gorgeous plants had already bloomed. This
newly discovered growth will keep emerging, bloom with large snow white flowers
for a short week or so, and then spread large scalloped leaves. (The banner to this blog is a summertime
picture of the resulting greenery from years past.) But today, this is my first true sign of
spring.
Searching for Skunk Cabbage |
Adjacent to a paved park trail Kim points out a thicket of
American hazelnut. Someone takes a close
look and points out tiny red flowers on the bare stems. The shrub is in bloom. On a nearby branch, the male catkins are
getting ready to open and make their pollen available to the wind. Kim says it would be fun having a table in
front of the plants with Nutella and Hazelnut coffee. This would help people easily connect with
this native shrub. Even without the
tasty offerings, this early flowering event is yet another sign of spring.
It quickly got colder and dusk began to set in. Several Bluebirds flew across the trail and
perched in some taller shrubs. We walked
a little way to a raised viewing platform.
The scene over the restored prairie was striking. Several deer made their way into the
surrounding thicket. In an ode to spring
we took turns reading a small excerpt from Aldo Leopold’s Sand County Almanac. He was poetically describing
the spring courtship ritual of the American woodcock. The tiny “peent” sound of the male is to be
followed by the “sky dance”. As Leopold
says:
“Suddenly
the peenting ceases and the bird flutters skyward in a series of wide spirals,
emitting a musical twitter. Up and up he
goes, the spirals steeper and smaller, the twittering louder and louder, until
the performer is only a speck in the sky.
Then, without warning, he tumbles like a crippled plane, giving voice in
a soft liquid warble that a March bluebird might envy. At a few feet from the ground he levels off
and returns to his peenting ground, usually to the exact spot where the performance
began, and there resumes his peenting.”
It was getting colder and darker. Several people had to leave. A few of us remained, carefully listening to
every little sound. Not a peent was
heard. We started heading back to the
parking lot and stopped at the end of the prairie for one last listen. “Peent”, “Peent”. It was the woodcocks! It was almost totally dark then and very
windy. A bird glided in to land close
by. It was a woodcock. Another glided in from the darkness. More “peents” and more birds quietly landed. Squinting into the darkness we never saw the
spiraling “sky dance” that night. It
probably was just too cold and windy for them to rocket up, rolling into the
night sky to perform the ritual. Perhaps
we would return in a few days when it becomes a little warmer and still. But it is spring! I didn’t have to wish my time away. It is spring!