Copyright 2024 by Lori-Ann Willey
The inspiration for this writing piece comes from a conversation I had with a woman in a waiting room last week. Among our many discussions, we talked about how nature can predict the weather, but so few people know how to do that these days, including some of those in that profession.
This morning, with sprinkles dropping all around, I figured I had enough time to step off the deck and look over my gourde plants. The second my bare feet hit the ground, the invitation to walk toward the woods was far too inviting, and like Hansel and Gretel following the bread trail, I fall for Mother Nature’s luring woodsy tricks every time, too. Everything about a wooded area is always a temptation for me -always has been, so, instead of looking over my garden plants, I walked into the woods instead. Despite the weather, there were no mosquitoes after my blood, and the sprinkles hadn’t filtered through the trees yet either. It was a perfect time for a walk-about.
As I put one barefoot in front of the other, my attention drew to a large boulder with navel lichen. I’ll go back another day and harvest what is on the ground only. Glancing around, I looked for wild fungi or berries to harvest, but found neither. It wasn’t long before my mind turned to future erosion control methods. I hadn’t cleaned up winter debris in this area yet, and today wasn’t the day to start. Each walk through the woods is different and there is always something new to see. The woods, like everything in the natural world, are ever-changing. It’s not only the lightness or darkness of the day. It’s not only the shadows that change from minute to minute, and it’s not only the leaves and plants that seem to shift in the wind either. It’s all that and so much more. It’s comfort, a sense of belonging, and a great appreciation and respect that hits all my senses, memories, and emotions, too. Even now, I still hear my parents’ voices as they taught me what they knew. I can “see” and “hear” them -always with me, still reminding me of lessons learnt so long ago. I was so little then, yet I was taught in a way that I would remember.
I grew up learning, studying, and observing nature -my parents were amazing teachers. How to read the sky, the leaves, flowers, and the plants to know when rain is coming, etc. The animals tell their own stories, too, and while hunting, I depend on the sounds of nature, the activity of the small critters and birds. They all tell a story or situation, and that is especially so when there is something different happening in the woods with the birds and the squirrels being the loudest and most persistent tattle tails, EVER! However, their movements alone tell a hunter a lot, too. If in the woods often enough, seeing, and paying attention to details, etc. one can’t help but to learn their behavior and their “language.”
Even when the sky is blue and the sun is bright, nature and its inhabitants know ahead of time when a storm is approaching, and they each prepare for it in their own way. I mean, how often do you see birds flying in the wind and rain? Sadly, most humans have lost the ability to read the sky/clouds, winds, plants, animals, etc. around us. Even as a child, while fishing down a long stream far away from where we pitched our tents, I’d note the change in wind direction and knew what to expect. Our family fished in the rain a lot, ‘cause that’s when the native trout bite the best, so the rain was welcomed by my parents, not so much by me. There was no turning back simply because our clothes were soaked. That may be why I do not like being in the rain to this very day. Hard to know.
The wild daisy (Oxeye Daisy) is a plant that grows about everywhere and is easy to see if one chooses to. As a child, it was fun to pull off one petal at a time saying, “he loves me, he loves me not,” however there was another reason to become fascinated by the flower -it can be used as a clock. The flower always faces the sun throughout the day, even if the sun is hidden by clouds, the plant knows where it is in the sky. By morning, the flower will start its day by facing east and at the end of the day, it’ll be facing west.
The dandelion and clover flowers are two examples, as well as many others, which can tell if a storm is approaching. The more humid it is, the tighter the flowers close. The same can kindah be said about the leaves/stems of the maple and poplar trees. When those leaves droop, look somewhat wilted, and in the slightest breeze you see the backside of the leaf as it flutters, the weather conditions are changing quickly. It doesn’t mean that it will rain, but most always, it will, or at least the conditions are right for a rain shower, at least.
Growing up, family vacations either found us visiting my grandparents in Mount Chase or traveling logging roads as often as possible. Often, we’d do both, visit my grandparents, go camping, and then visit them again on the way back through. No matter what, the trip was always a long one, and not just by distance and time, but because I was so very anxious to see my grandparents and go camping, too. To an anxious child, hours traveling seemed like endless days before we’d arrive!
The anxiousness always started the second my parents packed a couple loaves of bread, canned potatoes, a small bag of flour, salt, pepper, and butter. Canned potatoes because they were easier to pack and wouldn’t become bruised or over-heated enroute. The rest of our food would be fish caught and berries picked. We packed light, and we fished and foraged hard.
For hours, we traveled north before reaching my grandparents, then onto “Paper Company Land.” Those roads were and still are slow and bumpy so if I were the napping type, the second we reached a dirt road, I’d’ve been jolted awake. I always enjoyed watching the trip along the way, from the second we left our house to the point at which we’d pitch our tents. Even as a little-little girl, I knew, that one day, it would be me bringing my family to such faraway places…and I did. We pretty much had our favorite places to pitch a tent. Back then, there were no maps, there were no checkpoints, there were no campsites, and there were no road names or signs. I simply paid attention. I knew which roads to take, towns we’d pass through, and the store owners by name, too.
As we slowly traveled those bumpy logging roads for hours on end, I’d speak up and tell my parents things like, ‘That’s where we saw the dead bear once,’ ‘We almost hit a moose there before,’ ‘We never caught anything in that little brook except for chubs.’ My parents always seemed impressed with my memory from year to year, but they had no idea how many times I’ve traveled those roads and relived those memories in my head. I always wanted to be camping! Always! Now, over 50 years later, I still find myself living each day with just as much (more) appreciation as I did at the age of five!
One part of the trip that I didn’t like was how dusty those logging roads were, but only because they blocked my view as we drove along weaving around potholes for hours on end. Being unable to see, took away the anticipation of what awaited around the next corner -usually a moose. With limited view from my very anxious eyes, only then, was it OK to have a quick rain shower to “keep the dust down” as my father would say. Like him driving, I wanted to see everything, so sitting in the middle of the back seat ensured that I’d be able to see through the windshield and side windows at the blink of an eye or the turn of the head.
When the dusty road stopped my viewing pleasure for longer than a few minutes, I would instinctively glance at the poplar and maple sapling leaves along the road edges hoping to see wilted leaves fluttering in the slightest wind on a hot dusty day back. This was back when there was no air conditioning in vehicles, and especially in our red truck with an extended cab. Taught at a young age to identify certain trees, I knew if I saw the backside of poplar and maple leaves as they fluttered in the air meant rain was on its way, even if it ended up being that five minute shower, it not only meant less dust, but it meant cooler air so we could roll down the truck windows again without choking on that road dust!
One is never too young to learn the ways of nature, and it doesn’t matter how knowledgeable you are, there is always something to learn, something to see, something to hear, something to smell, something to touch, and something to remember -the physical and emotional connections.
No comments:
New comments are not allowed.