|
Blog 108
Lake Ketchum Art Galleries
Life On the Lake
Dedicated to the Joys
of Waterside Living
January 2007
TEN YEARS
AT THE LAKE
a Diary from Back Then,
with Fresh Updates

If you've ever driven Old Pacific Highway, you'll recognize
this slough.
8
Along the Old Pacific Highway the
farmers’ fields stretch off to the near horizon, flat as they can be, a vast
geometrical arrangement of color bands that appeals greatly to the eye, or at
least to mine. Do not think because it is winter the fields lie dormant. No,
there is a lot going on. Winter crops are growing, or else the rich brown
fields are newly turned. The colors are vibrant. I prefer the sight of them to
summer, when all is various shades of the same intense green. These are winter
colors.
Last year at this time the fields
were under water. Now, enjoying the benefits of a minor drought and sparkling
skies for more than a winter week, the fields are only puddled, here and there.
A new color to my eye is this buff. I first saw it in a Gilkey painting (mine)
and thought it all wrong, unreal. No color anywhere near to it exists in
nature, I thought. Well, I was wrong, inexperienced. Now I see entire fields
of that surprising, nondescript color.
What is it? What is being
grown? A thoughtful farmer has provided the answer in the form of a sign
erected just far enough away to be hard to read from the highway. After Norma
has clued me, I can just make out the first part: “Barely for the birds.” I
kid you not.
Barley probably has some
practical uses besides feeding the flocks of snow geese, mallards, and immense
trumpeter swans. It is used for making beer and ale. Also whiskey, I know.
Good—it is a long winter ahead, and if the land provides the makings for some
respite, so much the better.
My dictionary tells me
additionally that barley has two possible word origins, but has been around a
long, long time. Meanings fuzz and meld over time. One is Latin, far
or farr, having to do with spelt, a hardy wheat grown in Europe,, or a
grain from which farina is made. The word is also Germanic, coming to us
from the Saxon occupation in the form of Old English: bere, baer, baerlic,
barley. I suppose this is where we get beer. The word also means barn. A
barn is where the good crop, barley, is stored to keep it dry, or else it will
rot in the fields with winter rains. In middle English the vowel sounds have
blended into a single one, barli. It was pronounced the same as today.
Update:
Nothing to add here.
Barley is still barley. Think I'll go have a beer.

a small working barn along Old Pacific Highway
7
It is about five miles from our
place on the lake to the village of Stanwood. There are three possible routes
for us to take, each about the same distance. The easternmost takes us into a
large new shopping center dominated by Hagen’s, a modern food pavilion. First
a McDonald’s built there; a couple of years later a Burger King was constructed
directly opposite, the same way a Shell and Chevron take each other on,
tête-à-tête, mano a mano , or as we say, head-on.
The second route is the fastest.
It is to the West , but is not the most westward way to travel. It is called
the Pioneer Highway, State Route 530, which skirts the village and continues on
along a winding course through farmlands to Silvana and hence to Arlington and
points far East—eventually it goes through Darrington and continues on to
Rockport, where it ends in a merger with State Highway 20, plunging through the
North Cascades pass and ending up in Winthrop at the mouth of the Methow River,
at its junction with the great Columbia. This is a long ways off and the pass
is presently closed because of snow. It will remain so until June, if a normal
spring lies ahead.
The third route is my favorite
and I usually take it. It is the Old Pacific Highway and aptly named, though it
now is two lanes of speedy blacktop. If I hurry to the village by the quickest
route, the middle one, I usually return to the lake along this one because of
the grand view it provides. I can see the major mouth of the Stilly to the
South and Port Susan, a bay so heavily silted that a huge beige shadow indicates
its extreme shallowness and extends nearly to Camano Island. I can also see
from here to the North to Skagit Bay, with its attendant flat fields dedicated
to extensive agriculture.
The flats of the Stilly are also
farmed, but on a reduced scale, as if not to contest what goes on just to the
North. If the Skagit was not so near, so awesome, a person might be impressed
by what these farmed fields provide. The Skagit simply dwarfs the other river
valley and outclasses it from a scenic standpoint. There is no doubt why my
favorite regional landscape painters, the late Richard Gilkey, chose the Skagit
on which to live and paint. So would I.
Lake Ketchum straddles the two
watersheds as if it can’t quite make up its mind which to belong to and might
want to claim both. Thus it is truly neither. This is the perfect situation for
the likes of me. Years ago I published a photoessay on the two river valleys,
comparing and contrasting them. Today I am of the same divided mind. For so
long the Stilly has been my adopted river, first as a city sojourner, then as a
place where I lived for short times while the years advanced. But it is ruined
and shows no signs of recovery. Lately I have had to switch my allegiance, with
regret. It was either this or to dwell for the rest of my life in the shadow of
a ruined river, remembering only its ghost self, for its gray water never clears
anymore.
Update:
Not much change to report.
Worse, if anything, on the condition of Puget Sound and the mouths of the
two river basins, which heavily silt up and shallow their estuaries and
the separate nearby bays they disgorge their contents into. I try to
ignore it, but it keeps reminding me of its condition with a milky plume,
every time I try to drive out of here, either to the North or the South.
The farming community is
largely the same in the nearby Skagit Valley. The fields near Stanwood are
disappearing, acre by acre, and--quickly --housing projects are going in,
each with dozens of new homes advertising themselves as being priced in
the "low 300s." With prices nearly doubling in the past ten years we have
been on the lake, that is not so great a house or price for one. But
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people in this county and King happily
choose to live this way, side by side, or perhaps mano a mano (as I said
ten years ago about gasoline filling stations) but surely not
tête-à-tête, since
they are all facing away from each other. Even if it is only across the
narrow streets.

Ginsberg, right, with Phillip Whalen, long ago
6
Well, it was pretty awful, this
episode of The Fifties, and like most the others jumped around
thematically and chronologically, and this was distressing to watch. An old
Ginsberg finally appeared as segment narrator and what a gray eminence he has
turned out to be. (He died recently; nobody on film is every truly dead and
persists on, his age frozen, speaking and smiling into a future he never lived
to see. How ghostly.) Then there were young Ginsberg, skinny, with a lot of
hair, and Kerouac, whom the script writer called a famous football player. How
little does she know. At these words I guessed her age—probably about forty.
She did not live through the period and got the tone all wrong; what she read in
Halberstam’s book got misinterpreted through the summary method and her
conclusions were all wrong.
It was a disappointment and,
though I taped it, I decided it wasn’t worth keeping for its real-life
snippets. I ran it back to the beginning and afterwards taped a movie that, I
suspect, will be just as ephemeral.
Update:
Not all my entries from
back then are charming and brilliant. Some are downright dull and dated.
This is one of those. But at the time, it seemed important and insightful.
Forgive me.
Back to the present,
standing on my dock yesterday, fishing (the winter trout fishing is good
here, something I didn't know, back then. Live and learn.) I saw a
huge dark shape approach the dock and disappear beneath it, followed by a
long, snaky tail.
It was a muskrat. They are
not tiny, mouse-like creatures. A bit awesome, it made me think of first
of an otter, but it was not that large. And one summer several years ago,
while the bass fishing was still good for large-mouths, I hooked a
muskrat by casting too close to shore--where I should have know there was
a muskrat den. And I hooked one. It came rushing toward me, fast as a
bullet, and when I got my line back on the reel, it snapped my line, just
like that. It was a frightening experience. No bass, no trout, no
steelhead, no Chinook ever moved so fast and powerfully.
Just the sight yesterday
brought back all these old memories. The longer you live, the longer the
memories stretch out. And some of them are great ones.

Early computer with 3-1/4" slot for a hard disc and a tiny
screen. Remember those? Not mine!
5
There are days like this that
pass alarmingly fast. Where do they go? Beats me. Well, there was a bit of
computer programming to be done in the morning, after I’d checked the stock
market, national news, e-mail. I had to teach myself how to copy and save a
graphics file off the Internet. Clue—it involves the use of the right
mouse button. (The left is what does most of the daily work.) You copy it to a
word-processing program, such as Word, give it a name and save it to a file
folder and certain drive, probably my new ZIP drive, E. then you can it call it
up and display it on your screen. It can even be printed, if you have the need.
Also there was the problem of
converting an old Word Perfect file, with all its codes, into Word, which I’ve
gone over to in the past couple of years. Word will convert it, however
reluctantly, and there are usually some awful code mixups, such as WP’s block
protect command and a pesky capital C, closed up, which is how my WP em-dash
translates. I have to replace them, one by one, which is tedious and
time-consuming. Aside from these small things, the tasks went smoothly,
including backing up nearly all of my hard drive, labeled C, on my removable ZIP
discs, each of which holds 100 megs. Copying my Windows directory took a long
time, for it is a big, rich program that does a lot of work.
A four-chapter Ms. came in the
mail from my old college chum Verna Maclean, and it had to be . . . scanned is
the word for the day and I’ll use it again. I gave it a quick runover with my
eyes. Then there was a long phone call from my fishing friend, Russ. Norma and
I then took our usual two-mile walk around the lake; always there is a distant
neighbor to stop and chat with for a moment. This slows us down some. Today it
was a new one: I heard her name as Elliot, Norma thought it was Evans. We will
have to check the lake roster.
Then I blew some leaves and cedar
duff away from the gravel drive with my new (new for me, anyhow, though I was
given it for a birthday present a year ago) Tomorrow leaf blower/vacuum. I put
off learning how to use it for a year because I believed its only use was to
suck up leaves and shred them into a long swooping bag that I must carry over my
shoulder, all the while. But it does a blow job additionally, with a series of
nozzles or spouts which attach. I’ve discovered that to blow leaves is fun, or
nearly fun.
And then it was full dark. Soon
after dinner on the History Channel is part umpteen of David Halberstram’s
The Fifties, an adaptation of his book which I’d read a couple of years ago,
when it was remaindered. What a tedious trip down Memory Lane it is! Tonight
is a two-hour special on the Beats and Elvis Pressley. Kerouac and Ginsberg are
two of my specialties, so I’ll watch closely. I’ve read most of both of them.
Film clips, however, put your right there, in the living past, the burning
present. I’ll probably tape the program for the archives, so to speak. My
personal archives, of which I have many on video tape to date. Most are old
movies.
And there it is, my day. Is it a
lot or a little? Oh, yes, I’ve edited some on an old book that just won’t clean
up satisfactorily. And I’ve written this fresh diary entry.
Update:
Well, things change a lot in ten
years. Word for Windows is the currency of the land. Where has Word
Perfect gone? It limps along, with a few thousand users still, I suppose.
Remember "Reveal Codes?" What a pain in the cursor that was. Microsoft
came up with a surer means of formatting text and documents, and anybody
who tried it once or twice was quickly won over. But I miss some long-gone
aspects--the free telephone help, for instance. For a short while
Microsoft offered that, then began to charge for it, then gave it up. And
we new users learned how to fend for ourselves.
And ZIP drives, gee. Mine
is in storage and will never see the light of day again. Storage is
actually the halfway house to the garbage dump, just as the freezer often
is. I recently dumped 240 video tapes, after I learned the hard way that
the tape disintegrates in ten years of less and destroys the innards of a
VCR and necessitates a UPS trip back to the manufacturer's USA service
department, and sometimes even they cannot clean or fix it satisfactorily.
It is better to store on
DVDs. True, they won't last forever, either, but surely won't destroy the
player when you attempt to play them. This is a lesson learned the hard
way, I admit. Twice, because I didn't believe it the first time I did it.
No Eliot or Evans, so we
were both wrong.

Hans's house across the lake, taken that first winter.
(Canada geese in the foreground.)
4
Directly across the lake lives
Hans Berg and family. On a crisp autumn morning—it is not yet winter, but sure
feels like it—his lawn is the first thing I see on my way to breakfast. It is
bathed deep in frost and gives the illusion that a light snow has fallen overnight.
Soon the lawn will be washed in sunshine and the green will return by degrees.
The lake is flat, nearly black.
A few ducks inscribe long tapering vee-wedges, each at a different angle, for
these cruising surface-feeders are not behaving as flocks these days. Without
binoculars I can sort out the female shovelers from the widgeons of the same sex
partly by size but mostly by how they swim. The shovelers have their heads in
the water as they paddle along. The widgeons are a little smaller and swim with
their heads erect and seem forward-looking. The lone horned grebe in residence
is asleep, his long white neck curled back on itself like a miniature swan.
Hans has four grown daughters.
All have worked at Thrifty grocery, I heard. They have heavy blond hair. Since
Hans is sick, his wife and visiting daughters—a team—do all the yard work.
Earlier this fall I watched them rake up leaves industriously, their hair
flying. Since I had never seen them up close until lately, I must admit to a
bit of middle-aged male fantasizing. Nothing major. Mostly it was how vital
they looked, hair flying among the stirred-up leaves.
Hans has cancer. He is, in
fact, dying. I
do not know him well but find him highly likable, with his gruff German manner
and big flashing smile. He has myeloma, a disease of the plasma cells which are
in the bone marrow. The plasma cells produce some of the protein that
circulates in the blood. The cells manufacture antibodies, my textbook tells
me. (It is Choices, by Morra and Potts, 1980.) I bought it when I
did penance for my father's cancer with a group called Cancer Lifeline in
Seattle.
In Europe, where he came from, it
is called Kahler’s Disease. It sounds like he is German. I shall think of it
and call it Hans’s Disease. It is also called multiple myeloma. Because the
bone tissue is systematically being destroyed, Hans’s bones are becoming
fragile, brittle. This is painful. It is worse at night and often makes
sleeping impossible, he says, but I never see his lights on late. He must lie abed.
Tumors develop. There is excruciating pain in the back. The immune system no
longer functions and infections develop, with fevers and sometimes bleeding.
Pneumonia is likely.
Radiation helps reduce the growth
of the tumors, while chemotherapy sometimes bring down the bone pain. It is
important for the patient to exercise, for the cancer is causing the blood cells
to release calcium from the diseased bone in quantities the kidneys can’t
handle. There is pain urinating. Patients, my text tells me, “become weak,
nauseated, and disoriented.” There is the constant threat of bone fractures.
It is not a pretty condition and
Hans has had myeloma for several years. He is younger than I and retired
early, perhaps because of the onset of the cancer. He was the first mate for
ships on an international cruise line. He has seen the world many times over.
Now he is pinned to his house. From his speech I gather a first mate is a
member of management. He speaks accordingly. Not the captain but next in
command responsibilities. On a huge cruise ship they must be considerable. He
has taken all the radiation he can handle. They have cut him off from all but
palliative pharmacology. This means he is supposed to die at home and be quiet
about it. The hospital will not welcome him back, but must give him emergency
care when his wife, Joanne, deems it necessary and drives him fifteen miles
there in their red pickup truck. Always they return him promptly home. This is
how it is today.
When Norma and I take our daily
two-mile walk around the lake, I always am alert to signs of activity from
Hans's house or yard. Usually he is closeted inside. I check to see if the red truck is
present and accountable. There are other vehicles there often—Joanne’s, a
daughter or two who are visiting, perhaps the daughter who still lives at home.
It is not idle or morbid curiosity; I am hungry for the sight of a vertical Hans
and for an opportunity to renew our casual association. We are more
acquaintances than friends. Yet I care.
Once lately I saw Hans move
slowly along the side of the house, as wife and daughter were working in the
part of the yard that is not the lakefront but faces the road and presently us. I halted
him with my piercing whistle and waved heartily, I who could do so, and perhaps
foolishly did. He waved wanly back.
Just the other day I caught him
between house and car, while on my walk. Wife and visiting daughter were taking him out to lunch
in a restaurant. It was sunny, which meant no rain would fall on his
balding head.
Perhaps he was feeling better, or there was some special occasion, some small personal
triumph to go out to celebrate. Norma and I stopped in our tracks. Hans and I chatted
for too long, I fear. He was much thinner and leaned heavily for the first time I’d
seen on a cane. This fit the scenario, the myeloma syndrome. Then I
released
him to enter the car that was waiting for him. No, seeing how tired he looked,
I urged him to leave then, presently, turning away. For he would have talked on.
Will he make it through
Christmas? Or will it be better, more charitable, to hope he doesn’t, and his
long suffering swiftly end? I have no answers. I can only observe the public
fringes of his life from my small distance—while out walking or from across the ocean
of our lake. And the sight of him makes my heart ache.
Now there is the old seasonal
question: should we give them, him—no more than acquaintances—a poinsettia, as
we shall our neighbors on both sides. Or would this be too much—too massive an
invasion of his privacy and need to suffer alone? Mightn’t it be received,
though, for what it is? A simple sign of commiseration and neighborly good will? I hope
so.
Update:
We gave him the potted plant.
Some time passed, I forget just how much. Ten years is a long time ago
to remember. We heard that Hans died. I still can see his big-toothed
cheery grin. There was a lot of family activity around the house
and yard. Then we learned that his wife--Joanne, I believe her name
was--had cancer, too. What bad luck. One of the daughters, a nurse, moved home to take care of her. She knew her time was limited
and decided to build the house she always wanted--a modern dream house.
It was constructed on Camano Island, about twenty miles away. We saw
pictures of it in the local weekly newspaper: it was pretty nice and fancy.
Joanne
soon died. It took a year or two after Hans was buried. She died away
from her long home on the lake. The house on
the lake was put on the market and quickly sold. It was bought by a
bachelor, a body-builder who operates a crane. His name is Kurt
something. We know him only slightly. One summer day I saw him,
stripped to the waist, cavorting around the beach with a blonde in a memorable
bathing suit. Nebver saw her again or, for that matter, another female
visitor. He lives there alone.
One of the daughters kept the magnificent new house,
we heard. It is just a rumor. Much of what we learn about people is only
hearsay.
But what is a fact is that life does not stand still for very long.
People live, they die, and strangers come to the lake and occupy their houses.
It is true here and
elsewhere.

A small hatchery steelhead from the Wenatchee, kept for the table
3
My life revolves around rivers.
They are always in my mind. Never am I happier than when my feet are firmly
planted on the bottom of some stream, the current pressing against my waders,
the water green and clear to a depth of more than three feet. Give me a few of
some leafless alders and shaggy, black/green cedars on the far shore, with no
signs around of civilization, and I am as complete as I will ever be.
I have seen watersheds literally
vanish under my feet. First it was the Green, near Auburn, back in the primal
Sixties. Next it was the Skykomish, in the long reach between Sultan and
Monroe. Finally it was the beloved Stilly, where I’ve had a summer camp for
more than 35 years; fifteen of those have seen the watershed grow hopeless
wasted from multiple slides, while its channel became massively silted.
By degrees I lost my love of
fishing. My favorite rivers were ugly, an unpleasant place to be around.
Gradually my joy at being out of doors, with the hope of getting a steelhead or
two for my efforts, went away. Each time I heard the call my mind filled with
visions of muddy water and beaches buried in silt. Each flood brought more of
the ruinous soft debris and pea gravel; afterwards you could see where the
rivers and attendant creeks had carved recent paths through the stuff; the beach
looked like it was midway through the road-grading process. So I simply stopped
going out fishing, winter and summer.
Since moving to the lake my
interest in rivers has rallied somewhat with my rediscovery of the Skagit, a
huge stream with a vast watershed. If not pristine, much of it will serve until
the real thing comes around; with it I will make do, in the absence of anything
better for hundreds of miles in any direction. But recent logging and
road-building has bit deeply into this watershed and its tributaries already
show alarming signs. I will explore this only slightly familiar river and learn
some new reaches where it can be bank fished and, hopefully, no other fishers be
found, or else few of them. I must fish alone, unless it is only occasionally
with a good friend. Now that I no longer have a dog, I am bereft of true
company.
So yesterday I drove out to the
Skagit. It was a sparkling day, the sun low-angled with approaching winter and
casting deep shadows in the lee of the hills that elsewhere would be called
mountains. (If you have any doubt what mountains are, look directly to the East
and you will behold some impressive ones already capped with snow.) My watch
tells me I have about three hours in which to fish. It is enough.
I drive to the road leading to
the Mixer Hole. It is now gated, but we used to be able to drive along an old
railroad grade exactly one mile to where a path cut down to the huge river bar.
For the past several years fishers must walk the distance. This separates the
walkers from those who won’t or unable to—the big majority. I used to have
qualms about walking it, but Norma and I daily walk the two-mile circuit of the
lake and the distance has shrunk. It is no more than our normal trek. On a day
such as this—clear, with a patchy sun banding the track—it is a pleasure, but I
must take precautions against getting overheated on the way in; on the way out,
the grade will be deeply shadowed and there will be no problem. It will be
crisp, and the walk will serve to warm me up from the river’s chill.
About halfway in I flush a half
dozen ruffled grouse and the covey explodes on both sides of me. Stupid birds,
each flies off fifty or sixty feet and lands he believes invisible in a tree or
leaf-packed copse bottom. If you track them with your eye to their landing
site, they are easy to spot. This they don’t know, the dumb chickens. A hunter
could, and does, I suppose, blast them standing, which is illegal and
unsporting; either way, they taste the same.
A few small shotgun shells litter
the ground. (They will biodegrade in about one century.) From their size, no
hunter I, I would guess they are quail loads. There must be those here, too.
As I continue on at the same brisk pace two of the grouse start again, exploding
on to a second stand. This time I lose them in the brush. All is quiet,
uneventful, for the remainder of my walk in.
The river is high but a wonderful
transparent green. No one occupies the enormous drift; it must be a third of a
mile long, though not all of it is good drift water. Only the lower half is
slow and deep enough, with an irregular bottom that causes my lazy feet to
stumble occasionally. This kind of water will hold resting steelhead. But not
today. It is still a little early for them.
An old man drifts by in a powered
sled, fishing alone. We exchange pleasantries. He caught a five pound dolly varden earlier, he tells me, when prompted. When I ask about steelhead, our
common quest, he has nothing to report. No salmon, either. The river is
supposed to be full of chums. He is fishing bait and appears to know what he is
doing.
It is enjoyable, Spey-casting out
a long line, with the day’s red marabou attached at the end of my leader. I
touch not a fish in an hour and a half, and decide to leave early, perhaps to
fish another pool. Cool now, I wonder how long it will take me to hike out. I
check my watch and when I reach my car look again. Twenty-six minutes. I had
thought it might be twice as long. That’s not a long walk, when measured by
time.
One more stop before it is too
dark to fish. The new pool I call the Widow, in tribute to a kind woman who
lets me park in front of her humble house, from where it is a very short stroll
to the river’s edge—another long bar. I caught a fine steelhead here last year,
just as the season drew to a close, and its memory keeps bringing me back,
though I’ve caught nothing here since except small dollies.
One strikes but I miss it. Then
it is too dark for even an optimist to fish any longer. I drive home through a
memorable raspberry sunset.
Update:
I haven't fished the Skagit in
several years. It, like the Stilly, has lost much of its access to the public,
and has had some very bad years of wild fish returns. The hatchery fish runs are
generally over with in the Skagit and Sauk (its major tributary) by the time the
wonderful wild fish begin coming back. Lately, there have been very few, and the
authorities have usually closed the rivers in March and April to protect those
few returning fish from incidental injury from being caught and released. But
last year, 2006, was good, according the a friend who guides on the river. And
there were few wading fishers who showed up. So there is some wan hope for the
future.
So maybe I'll give in
try in a couple of months, if the river is open to fishing again. But,
admittedly, as I grow older, fishing a large, strong river becomes more
challenging. Especially if there are very few fish to be encountered.
And in the coming year I
acquired two black Labs, a brother and a sister. When you do this, they
become your constant companions--whether you want this or not. So I am
no longer briefly, sadly, alone.

Somebody's stock photo of some neighborhood raccoons 2
This is an animal story. (Bear with me.) All
animal stories today involve people. It is man’s fate. Our neighbors to the
West are Anton Ehlinger and Carrie Urling. In spite of the different last
names, you may be assured they are married. They have two young children—Haley,
a girl of six, and Keaton, a boy of two, pretty nearly three.
Carrie has kept her maiden name
for professional purposes; she is a high school teacher, half-time now that she
has a family to raise, who now counsels students with social and learning
problems. It is a tough job, and often she comes home with a whipped look.
Normally she is bright and cheerful, full of chatter.
Anton teaches PE in a high school
many miles away to the North and—is it necessary to say?—is wonderfully fit.
Weight-lifting is one of his classes. I know not what the others are like but I
remember my own school days and there was a lot of horrible gym stuff, like
wrestling in your weight class, shinnying up ropes, running obstacle courses
involving tagging a wall or something before making the return run, and vaulting
a most dreaded object called the horse, made of padded leather, with a pair of
grips for mounting and flinging yourself over (if luck be with you today). I’d
guess that many of these implements of torture remain and only a few have been
superseded. Aside from what he does for a living, Anton is a nice, quiet guy.
He and I share a solitary vice: He is nuts about fishing and goes at every
opportunity.
Until Keaton developed a severe
allergy to cats, the Erlingers had two and the kids’ play revolved around them.
When the decision had to be made to find them new homes, all four family members
were devastated and grieved their loss. To fill the gap, they adopted two large
feral neighborhood cats. Haley and her mother feed them from afar, since the
cats will not approach anyone close enough to be touched, let alone petted. A
shame. Carrie and the kids put food out in little dishes, then retreat behind
glass sliders and turn on the outdoor floods. This is the sign it is cat chow
time.
It is chow time for the raccoons,
as well. The cats wisely scurry at the approach of the overcoated terrors. The
raccoons eat their food with impunity. From behind the glass the Ehlinger kids
and their parents watch the well-lit, bright-eyed critters vie and forage
freely. When the food is gone—in seconds, often—all disperse. The lights get
snapped off, the kids go to waiting beds.
I have seen a raccoon at the lake
only once before. Perhaps I saw two, that night. It was dark. Norma has
sighted them more often. After dinner my son was busy installing a new ZIP
drive for my computer—a belated birthday gift. My son thought of it. He is an
expert at computers and makes his living programming complex networks and
performing related difficult tasks. The computer lives on the lower level of
our house at the lake, so we were all down there, wife, self, daughter-in-law.
The installation was not going
well and the expert was having problems. It sometimes happens. For some reason
the outdoor floods got turned on; there are several of them, and they produce a
powerful glare. Brilliant light got splayed across the cement patio. After a
blinding moment we began to see huge dark shapes moving across the light field.
The beasts grew in number until there were five of them lumbering about—great
shaggy ominous-seeming creatures, each bigger than a spaniel.
Incredible, but true. All were
thickly dressed as for a Russian winter, their coats thick and shiny, the fur
standing out from their from their bodies Ears like spear points, muzzles
tapering to a black bead of a nose, paws smally fingered, clutching air, and
eyes, those eyes, masked for trick or treat. Why here, why now?
We had given them the signal.
Turned on patio lights mean food, come running. You want to get your share,
don’t you? Not a cat was in sight. Banished. But Carrie and the kids will
settle for a raccoon any old day. Cats are common place at the lake. I have a
hunch the raccoons may prove more than a nuisance. They may be a menace. Even
if you aren’t a cat.
Update:
the neighbors stopped
speaking to us, over mutual dog matters and other concerns, many years
ago. Anton moved out, about 18 months ago. Don't know whether they were
married or not--that is part of the confusion that results from
hyphenated "married" names. And there are the children and their names
to be considered. And her refusal (if that is what it was) to take his
last name. But these are modern times, we keep telling ourselves.
We have deep concerns
about the maturation of the children, who do not speak to us, either.
How sad!
1
stormy day, we are visited by a heterogeneous array of
waterfowl along our grassy beach. For weeks now, these guys have been grazing
the shallows of the lake, gobbling up the old, brown vegetation—mostly Elodea and the
last of the dying duckweed and its look-alike cousin, the Mexican water fern.
I sort out the following: two pairs of
mallards (most ordinary), eight coots, six American widgeons (four females and
two males, unpaired, the males showing up only recently, with their shiny
pates), and four female northern shovelers, but with nary a male in attendance
all autumn. Evidently the males are all off somewhere together. (Playing
cards, drinking beer, smoking cigars?)
All the ducks are surface
feeders, but the species vary somewhat in their habits. For instance, the
mallards and widgeons will invert, turn tail-up, in order to reach deeper weed
in the shallows. So will the platypus-billed shovelers, but they have less far
to descend before touching grubby bottom. The coots will actually dive to grab
the matted green. I’ve never timed them, but I’m sure they stay submerged a
full minute or more.
On shore coots are odd-looking
birds, with their whitish beak and bulbous body. You’d think they’d have
trouble flying and they do. It is easy to pick them out in flight, for they
buzz along the water, unable or not choosing to soar. They skitter, they
flutter, they fan the water with their feet and wings, they churn the water,
both taking off and landing, usually not far away from their starting point.
I ask Norma what color feet they
have, these soft black coots, and she replies, “Green.” So be it, though I
don’t remember seeing any duck with such feet. It is only when there is a
windstorm, such as now, that they and the others waddle ashore. Clearly none of
the ducks are meant to be landlubbers. They strut most awkwardly, their
upturned tails nearly rubbing the ground.
For now it is the shoreline they
all occupy, stepping in and out of it. Occupants neither of the deep water nor
the land, they miserably occupy the nether region. It is the chop they shun.
In spring I’d say they were
feeding on the snails and other crustaceans they find along the marginal edge,
but now it is deep autumn—those creatures are dormant or dying. When the days
get longer (soon, soon), the seed or larvae of such things will germinate and
spring into life. For now the ducks can find only the matted brown weed, or
perhaps the newly exposed roots, white threads twined among the gravel. Ducks
hurry along the process of breaking down the organic matter into its elements
and making it disappear by degrees. This is what the lake needs now.
Shotguns boom off in the
distance. It is the wildfowl hunting season. A duck that has been eating this
fetid weed must have a terrible taste. One bite and the rest of the bird goes
into the garbage. Is this another form of recycling?
Meanwhile the feeding ducks
relieve themselves in the lake, adding to its already noxious phosphorous
burden.
Life's like that, I am
repeatedly told.
Update:
not much change in duck
populations, only, we have no large flocks of American widgeons any
more, nor even a stray. When the good people of the lake decided to
"control" duckweed annually because it was visually annoying, the
chemical used, fluridone, got rid of the duck fodder almost entirely.
And also the widgeons. They went elsewhere. Lots of duckweed in other
lakes. But I miss 'em--their sweet sound, the thunderous departure when
my fishing boat got too near, and even the multitudinous shower of duck
crap when they, alarmed, took to the air.
I always wore a cap when
fishing, and also covered my hear and shoulder with my outstretched
arms, when they rose voluminously over me and my boat. But I don't
remember ever being hit.
No duck hunting ever
allowed on this lake, and it is an unenforceable crime even to discharge
a gun on the lake or nearby.
|
|