Friday, August 31, 2012

In Memoriam: a meditation




As we arrived at the cottage thunderheads rolled over the tree line and out across the vast expanse of Lake Michigan. I rushed down onto the narrow beach. Bright sunlight danced with shadows as the broken edge of the storm swiftly gathered itself into a solid overcast sky that poured down torrents of rain. I am not a great believer in coincidence. On the other hand, I am acutely sensitive to nature’s moods and when they resonate with my own emotions I welcome the symbiosis.

After several months in a nursing home, my mother suddenly took a turn for the worse. She was admitted to the emergency room in Venice, Florida, near where she had lived for the last 23 years. The next day, before I could book a flight, she died.

Death does not respect anyone’s schedule. There is no convenient time to learn that one’s mother has died. As it happened, after I learned of her death I found myself in a rental cabin on Lake Michigan, staring at the horizon every day for a week. When death chooses to occupy your mind the horizon – that paradoxically finite edge of infinity – can be a hard line on which to rest your gaze. Or it can be a comforting one.

Death can appear immediate and unequivocal or one singular moment in an endless cycle of regenerative life; it can feel excruciating and irremediable, or it can bring peace and enduring comfort.

What follows is a meditation inspired not by a contemplation of that horizon, but by a walk near a river, through a forest and a prairie meadow. These are all among the features that can be found in the urban wilderness of Maywood Environmental Park, in Sheboygan, WI.

Dawn
In memoriam, Polly (Daniel) Kempes, 1925 – 2012

I awake before dawn, suddenly alert in unfamiliar darkness, as if to keep an appointment I hadn’t made, but one I can no longer postpone. During the night it had rained – a hard thunderous downpour.

Last week’s newspapers still lie in the smug, neatly bundled heap where I had put them with such good intentions. Before I heard the news.

Alone, I go to the river. A hoary mist rises out of unfathomably black water. The riverbank bristles with grasses and sedge tousled by the night storm, heavily laden with morning dew, but perfumed with the fresh, damp sweetness of wild indigo, jewel-weed, wild cucumber.

From an unseen place in the misty shadows a great blue heron appears, silent and majestic, like the spirit of night. Its dark, angular form rises awkwardly, then sails with effortless solemnity into the brightening east.

I did not choose to love the river any more than I choose to breathe each breath. My love of nature was perhaps her greatest gift to me at that moment of youth upon which all else turns. She loved me and she let me go; she gave me freedom to wander, to linger at the river, to hear to the morning song of lark and sparrow – to learn to love in turn what is wild and free.

A doe looks up from the riverbank to stare at me, hesitant, expectant; then steps, unhurried but resolute, into the deeper darkness of the wood. Her three dappled fawns I had failed to see follow, softly stepping in line as if tethered together.

I disturb a brood of wild turkeys on the path. The young ones scatter at my approach, melting into the underbrush, while two hens strut protectively behind. Then they too disappear.

In the gradually lessening gloom a muskrat stirs from the security of overhanging grass, glides across the smooth surface of the water until it becomes indistinguishable from the river itself.

Those who are so inclined may see these fleeting encounters with wild creatures as omens, but they are not apparitions; they manifest our desire to heal the world and ourselves.

The wide, accommodating path I’ve been walking ends abruptly, with no sign or warning. The carcass of a crow rests on the verge, inert but peaceful, its feathers black and glistening. Its cold blue eye reflects a glimmer of the dawning sky.

I press on as if I have no choice, plunge into an unknown forest, as if no one has preceded me; a pioneer in a wilderness of tangled, dew-drenched brush, a wilderness of tear-stained, tangled emotions – as if no one else has ever lost a mother.

Rays of rising sun cut through the misty forest like golden swords. I emerge from a thicket into open prairie aflame with goldenrod, bejeweled with dew. The three fawns – untethered now, motherless – stare in fearless astonishment at my presence.

A mother’s love is the one debt that we can never repay. The best we can do is to love the world, to hold it in close embrace, as we hold our own children until the day comes when, like the fawns, they too sally out of the forest on their own into the blazing sun of a dawning day.

Here in a sunlit meadow is how I forgive myself for the thousand little deaths denied each time we said goodbye, each day we lived in our separate cities a thousand miles apart. I come to claim my true inheritance, to reap such joy as she sowed in me, to live with the knowledge that all rivers flow to an unbroken ocean.

The clean, sharp lines of three Sandhill cranes cleave the sky like a single blade. A few lingering storm clouds dissipate, vaporize. The sun rises into a sky so cleansed that my moist eyes ache in wonder at its blueness.

This is how I want to remember her; to reawaken after the storm in the night, to greet the glorious new day, to go on living my purposeful and reckless life, to love the world as I have been loved.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Blue Moon event on the Milwaukee County Grounds

This annual event sponsored by the Friends of the Monarch Trail is always lovely. The full moon makes it especially wonderful. There are few places in the Milwaukee metropolitan region better than the County Grounds to watch the sunset and moonrise simultaneously.

 
For more information go to Monarch Trail.


Thursday, August 9, 2012

A visit to “Sand County”


I could have waited for the hand of autumn to paint the land with glorious color. I could have cleared a day on my calendar. But then, in all likelihood, something urgent would have come up to preempt my trip. Besides, I’ve already waited far to long to visit Aldo Leopold’s farm.

I picked up my first copy of Leopold’s classic “A Sand County Almanac” sometime in my idealistic youth, when Wisconsin was just one of many unexplored states west of my home in New York. That slender volume with its cover illustration of wild geese calling, now yellowing and worn with age, has survived many a move. The most important brought me permanently to Wisconsin. Coincidence.

Since then, over more decades than I care to enumerate, I often thought about visiting “the shack” where Leopold lived, wrote, and experimented with the ecological ideas that made him justifiably famous. Though fame and influence have a way of crossing over into mythos, Leopold’s writing, both eloquent and accessible, rooted him firmly in the real world. I’ve never tired of rereading the “Almanac” but my latent aspiration went unconsummated.

Until today.

The trip wasn’t planned; you won’t find it on my calendar. On impulse, “with such dignity as I can muster of a July morning,” as Leopold wrote in his almanac entry for this month of deepest summer, I set out from the city to satisfy finally my long-dormant desire. Two hours later I leave the freeway and head west through cornfields on a rural road that skirts the Baraboo hills, which are distressingly brown due to drought. A turn north takes me towards the Wisconsin River. The roads get progressively narrower and trees close in overhead. 

When Leopold bought his 80 acres along the Wisconsin River in 1935, it was little more than sand, having been cleared, over-farmed, and abandoned. I salute the dense forest that greets me on the final leg of my pilgrimage, knowing it to be the result of careful restoration efforts by Leopold and his family in the 1930’s and 40’s.

The Leopold Center parking lot is full and its courtyard rings with a lively clamor. But down the road a piece there is only one car pulled off to the side where a humble log fence barely keeps the forest at bay. Fittingly, no signs mark the place. Leopold savored his solitude. The conundrum for this particular kind of historical site is how best to honor the founder’s intentions while welcoming a multitude of tourists eager to share in the experience. A passage from the Almanac is especially poignant: “There are degrees and kinds of solitude,” he wrote, as he described with relish being stranded by spring floods.

I set off through the thick stand of aromatic pines. An unlocked bicycle is propped against a trunk. A low post bears an elegantly designed numeral for the self-guided brochure I picked up at the Center. I read that 3,000 pines were planted every year despite the “dust-bowl conditions” that decimated the plantings with “95-99% mortality.” I ponder perseverance as the forest broods in deep shade under the midday sun.

“The Prairie” opens suddenly before me. Bursts of white wild indigo with vibrant gray-green leaves stand out against prematurely yellowing sedges and prairie grass. Tall rhizomes reach skyward; the white flowers that give this species its name already have become strings of seedpods, many well on their way to mature black. Leopold was forward thinking in so many ways. This patch of sun and deep-rooted flora was a pioneer restoration project at a time when prairie landscapes were still underappreciated.

Then, surprisingly close to the road, I recognize the asymmetrical roofline snuggled up against the woodland and the weathered gray wood siding and white door of “the shack.” It is not the farm’s most important feature, certainly not in the ecological sense. But the weight of his presence makes it Leopold’s most distinctive “signature on the face of the land.” The shack is modest and utilitarian. What, I wonder, would Leopold make of the sturdy padlock required to prevent admirers from walking off with his teakettle for a keepsake? Or one of the turtle shells he placed on a shelf along with his axes, shovel and saws?

A few paces away, notched in a pine and cedar grove, is the outhouse. This decidedly more modest and utilitarian edifice, built by Leopold’s son, was engagingly dubbed “the Parthenon.” We value most the things that we make with our own hands.

Compelling as they are as part of a portrait of the man, these material artifacts are not what I have come to see. Leopold himself concludes the foreword to his Almanac with the words, “Nothing could be more salutary … than a little healthy contempt for a plethora of material blessings.” No, I have come to walk the land that he so cherished, to listen for the birdcalls that he so lovingly describes, to steep myself in this very personal and yet universal biotic community.

I find the sand farther on, near the river. It’s a wonder anything can grow here! But the evidence of nature’s resilience is incontrovertible. Oak saplings spring from the sand like biological explosions. Sauk is the actual name of this county. Leopold titled his almanac to express the ubiquity of sand and the hardships involved in farming on – or restoring it.

In fact much of the underbelly of the entire state of Wisconsin is sand. Ironically, we are blessed with such nice sand – a very pure form of silica dioxide bearing a high compressive strength – that it is in great demand as a hydrofracking proppant. The sand is mixed with water and chemicals and then the resultant toxic slurry is injected at high pressures into fissures deep below the earth’s surface. The purpose of this violent and controversial process is to shake up shale and other rock sufficiently to release oil and natural gas. Thus we feed our fossil fuel addiction.

I kick up a spray of sand, musing on one of Leopold’s most important and oft-quoted passages: “We abuse land because we see it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.” How would the author of “A Sand County Almanac” feel, I wonder, if he knew that the sand, bane of agriculture and forest restoration alike, was being extracted “in excess of 12 million tons per year?”1 Large swaths of Wisconsin countryside, both farms and forests, are being ignominiously scraped away and transported to distant states with lucrative oil shale formations.

“Like winds and sunsets, wild things were taken for granted until progress began to do away with them. Now we face the question whether a still higher ‘standard of living’ is worth its cost in things natural, wild, and free.” He wrote that in 1949! “For us in the minority,” he continued, “the opportunity to see geese is more important than television, and the chance to find a pasque-flower is a right as inalienable as free speech.” Minority indeed; as I look out over the wide Wisconsin River I am enjoying a hefty measure of the solitude Leopold sought in this very place. Though delightfully peaceful it confirms my membership in “the minority.”

The river is uncommonly low. It too seems to consist more of sand than water. Except for some dead logs, the surface remains unbroken under the hot July sun. No insects stir the air; no fish rise to seek them. A pair of gulls squabbles half-heartedly on the far shore. Scorched grasses and shriveled wildflowers line the riverbanks.

The drought I’d observed earlier plagues huge swaths of the state.

Is the drought an anomaly or a symptom of global warming? The governor – who disputes the possibility of global warming on ideological rather than scientific grounds – recently declared 23 counties disaster areas. It is, indisputably, the worst drought in 24 years and counting, with no relief in sight. As I stroll through brown, desiccated grass I come upon a brake of scrawny and twisted berry canes, blackened as if by fire. A hard, tiny nub of a berry adorns the tip of each cane, so completely shrunken and disfigured that I can’t tell if they are wild raspberries, blackberries, or some other kind. Drained of all succulence, neither bird nor passing pilgrim will dine on these drought-charred berries.

Even in the shade of a boggy dell where ground cover remains green, I find deer tracks like future fossils embedded deeply in mud so dry that the weight of my step doesn’t squeeze out even a teardrop of moisture.

The self-guided trail is a short loop that could be circumnavigated in less than half an hour, even stopping to read the brochure at every marker. My pace is leisurely. Each new unfolding moment I hold like a Rosary bead, feeling blessed. In the midday heat there are few signs of wildlife. I disturb a sunbathing turtle, which abandons its post on the end of a log with a peremptory plop. A disheveled knot of unidentifiable downy white feathers in the grass hints at the daily struggle of life in the wild. Farther on two empty halves of a shell leave no doubt that someone made a lunch of river clam.

In his July chapter Leopold informs us, “During every week from April to September there are, on the average, ten wild plants coming into first bloom.” But on this late July day the woods seem bereft of flowers. Perhaps it’s the drought, or just the low point of deepest summer when the law of averages balances out profligate spring. “In June as many as a dozen species may burst their buds on a single day.” Not now.

I am not complaining. There is no wrong time to for a walk outdoors. Leopold tells us “It is, by common consent, a good thing for people to get back to nature.” But what kind of nature do we find when we “get back to” it? Leopold’s farm, in many ways, was and still is a laboratory for nature, for ecological restoration.

Everywhere I walk I notice small, unnaturally bright orange flags festooning the groundcover, seemingly at random. I knew better than to expect a wilderness. Leopold himself identifies an inherent conflict: “All conservation of wildness is self-defeating, for to cherish we must see and fondle, and when enough have seen and fondled, there is no wilderness left to cherish.” The flags, I learn, mark patches of invasive garlic mustard so that the foundation staff can locate new sprouts early in spring before they have a chance to propagate. In lieu of wilderness we have, wisely it seems to me, opted for nature that is “husbanded” – managed for healthy and sustainable biodiversity.

I don’t know when I first began to hear the sound of traffic. The increase in volume has been gradual as I walk a ridgeline, following the self-guided trail through the pines. But as I near the last marker on the trail, without any obvious crescendo, I am suddenly aware of the loud, persistent hum of rubber on concrete. Startled in equal measure by its familiarity and incongruity, I am struck with the uncomfortable realization that I might well be back in Milwaukee, walking as I so often do along the Menomonee River Parkway trying to ignore the same noisome intrusion.

It is not visible from here, but a steady stream of travelers on the interstate freeway passes by within earshot. The phenomenon is not unlike that of the railroads in Leopold’s time, which “began to carry city-dwellers, en masse, to the countryside.” The effect, he lamented, was that “the greater the exodus, the smaller the per-capita ration of peace, solitude, wildlife, and scenery, and the longer the migration to reach them.”

This very freeway, of course, brought me here for my own personal ration of the same natural amenities. “The automobile has spread this once mild and local predicament to the outermost limits of good roads—it has made scarce in the hinterlands something once abundant on the back forty.” Ironically, I have made my pilgrimage only to find the truth that I’ve known well all along: what I sought is indeed available to me in the “back forty” of my beloved urban wilderness areas of Milwaukee. After nearly three hours, feeling fully steeped in Leopold’s oeuvre, I’ve “come home” in more ways than I’d imagined possible when I set out this morning.

Two centuries ago when the Industrial Revolution began, there’s been a steadily accelerating assault on the natural systems that our planet needs to survive. The wilderness has been driven back on every front. But we may finally be approaching full circle when “getting back to nature” is unremarkable, when our culture sufficiently values nearby nature to ensure that it is available to “city-dwellers.” Cities are where most of us live today. Urban parks are the equivalent of Leopold’s “back forty.” This has to be more than a metaphor. We have to get out of our cars and go to them to find “refuge from too much modernity.”


1Silica Sand Mining in Wisconsin, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, January 2012.