Saturday, January 24, 2009

MAINE MORNING DUCK REPORT...JANUARY '09

Sea smoke dances over the northeast Back Cove channel leading to Casco Bay. A progression of Arctic air masses (The Polar Express) has caused ice formations to form on the surface of this tidal basin so we are frozen over from shoreline to mid-bay. One doesn't walk on this ice as the continual ebb and flow of the tide creates ice pilings rather then a smooth, thick surface. We are experiencing a winter-winter this year! That means temperatures have remained consistently cold so that the snow remains on the ground rather than being washed away by rain or solar heat.





Our friends the ducks look like black lava rocks dropped on big chunks of white. Not much paddling in the open waters. But they do continue to march up the duck channel with the rising tide and leave for open waters as the tide recedes. There continues to be ever changing life along the foot path. Due to the treacherous conditions, we will explore the winter shore line as the Canada goose does, from above, in V formation. Visibility is as far as the eye can see on this crisp blue, blue sky day. No discernible wind so the gliding will be smooth and easy. Let's not ruffle our feathers. Come on, let's take off.


Flying counter-clockwise, we're launching from the duck channel directly in front of my home situated on the mid-south shore. Baxter Boulevard separates the shoreline on our right from the embankment on the left which borders the south, west and north corridors. The eastern arm, or Bayside, is a combination of noisy Interstate 295 and large sports fields.


Our journey has us exploring only the water line as the bird flies. Marsh grass grows along the southern, western and north western shores. In addition to the southern duck channel, a stream flows into the cove due west and another urban drain is due north. These areas are the favored locations for water fowl congregations...moving with the ebb and flow of the tides. Morning finds them resting and feeding on the southern shore while mid-day and afternoon they fancy the bay, either due west or north. Could it be the waterfront afternoon breeze that draws them to these locations?


Continuing in flight we find beach terrain on the northeast and eastern shores. About a hundred feet off the northeastern beach is a bird rock where seagulls flock. It was on this rock that a bald eagle landed on November 30, 2006. Why do I recall the specifics. It was the day I found my new home. Driving the Boulevard, listening to Rachmaninoff's Concerto in C Minor, spotting the eagle...the future was feeling very good. OOPS. I digress.


On the eastern beach is an ever changing rock sculpture garden built by one of Portland's many unidentified artists. I am in awe of our own mini Stonehenge. Five, six, seven rocks precariously balanced on one another surviving the forces of nature. Sometimes one falls to a northwest blow or vandals, but another is quickly erected and the sculpture garden evolves. Like the tides, it has an ebb and flow.

Coming around we now glide over the southeastern beach which is adjacent to the Back Cove parking lot. Bustling activity here with cars coming and going so it's only foraging seagulls frequenting these grounds. Anything for a scrap.


Although the cove formation is square, the scalloped edge and meandering foot path creates a rounder appearance. Our journey seems as though we are circling, always banking to the right. (That's flight speak.)


Tides in the Back Cove range from a high of 10.4 feet during the new and full moons to a low of
-8 feet during less extreme lunar phases. On average, the tide change is 8.5 feet. At low tide the bay appears to be one very large clam flat with a small channel, drawing 4 feet, leading to the open ocean. This lack of draw keeps the area pretty much boat free, although during the summer a lobster man sets a few traps in the southeastern quadrant. Hauling the traps is subject to tides. I believe Frederic Law Olmsted, designer of Portland's park system in the 1870's, would like knowing that the Back Cove is an estuary for ducks, geese, herons, egrets and the occasional bald eagle.


As we glide back towards the southern shore duck channel, I am aware of more details to describe. Those will have to wait until the foot path is passable or the great Snow Goose comes and sweeps me off my feet.

Friday, January 9, 2009

THE RITE OF HIBERNATION

HIBERNATION is a derivative of the Latin word "hibernus, wintery." It's literal translation means to spend the winter in a dormant state. Especially in the northern climates, we are all too familiar with this season of lengthy nights and shortened daylight hours, layers of clothes, securely tightened windows, and a constant eye to the weather channel. Just like the animals, we often put on a few extra pounds, become shut-in and lethargic.

This year I've taken a different view of the season. I've decided to celebrate what many consider negatives and try turning them into positives. It's made a considerable difference and I'm experiencing hibernation jubilation.

I'm grateful for:

  • Long nights so I can enjoy more candlelit hours. Whether lighting candles on my kitchen window sill for the enjoyment of commuters driving home
on Baxter Blvd. or whiffing the Frasier fir scent of my favorite Thymes candle glowing in the living room, lighting candles as the daylight hours shorten has brought a scented serenity to my home. This I will miss with longer days of light.
  • Having a stack of books that I know will be devoured during the "long" hiberius nights. I always read a David McCullough non-fiction during February. Last year my friends asked if I was still "in the Panama Canal" as I worked my way through PATH BETWEEN THE SEAS. It was a worthy trip. This year ," THE GREAT BRIDGE" is on deck. Anyone want to join me span the East River?

  • Soup Suppers that are often and healthy. I've been developing a soup-a-week venue. In researching new recipes, my extensive, but often under utilized cookbook library is coming to life. You know a cookbook is just an ordinary book until it has food stains on its pages. I can hear the authors breathing. Hello James Beard, Fannie Farmer, Marion Cunningham, Julie Russo, Shelia Lukins, and my favorite, Bonnie Stewart Mickelson author of HOLLYHOCKS & RADISHES from Pickle Point Publishing (That's another story in itself.)
  • Walking in the city and having all the sounds muffled by the snow.
  • Wrapping a scarf around my neck every time I venture outside.
  • Visiting museums and galleries to get out of the weather.
  • X-country skiing for just an hour....anytime of day.
  • Vintage hankies for when the sniffles set in.
  • Beach walks, winter colors of white and gray, and huge moons.















"In the midst of winter, I finally learned that there was in me an invincible summer."
Albert Camus

Hibernation is just what you make of it!

Friday, January 2, 2009

FAN THE FLAME





A NEW YEAR!

The traditional holiday of making resolutions that are rarely kept. This year I decided to undertake that time honored tradition a bit differently. No, I'm not going to take back my resolutions. God only knows I have enough on my plate. But I am going to remove many from that daunting RESOLUTIONS list that invariably haunts me for twelve months... and individually burn them. I've created my FIRST ANNUAL "ENOUGH ALREADY" LIST.


Inspired by a suggestion from the book SIMPLE ABUNDANCE, I created a list of things I place in the "Enough Already" category. Begin by completing the statement, "Enough already with _______________." For instance, one of mine was, "Enough already with being bothered by a noisy neighbor." I wrote that on a slip of paper, folded it and added it to the pile of concerns I wanted to torch. In the end I had written nine "Enough Already(s)" on separate slips that were folded then dropped, one at a time, into the lovely fire dancing in my fireplace. One of the slips drifted to the corner and I thought, "Oh, no, which one is it that won't be done with!" But alas, fire is energy and it seemed to seduce the escapee into the fold of golden-amber flames. Relief. Nine concerns no longer viewed as "have to do or my problem" but acknowledged and set free to the universe. In their own, rightful time, each will be achieved.


I still have a couple of resolutions requiring my attention, one day at a time. Some of the other stuff though, "enough already." Let it go. Maybe I'll have to let it go again next year, and the year after. But for 2009, I'm giving it an energetic lift-off and I'm just a little bit freer.


So fan the flames with "enough already" and enjoy the warm glow of letting go.


HAPPY NEW YEAR, 2009