I remember the first bird that counted. Clarification: I remember the first bird I counted.
Mom and Dad had rented a cabin so we could join them for a long weekend on Skyline Drive in the Shenandoahs, June, 1988. Did they think their grandkids were Nature undernourished? Mountain vistas, enfolding trees, night sky – we even saw a bobcat at dusk one evening. Maybe I was undernourished.
The second morning we hiked up a lonely trail in deep shade that suddenly brightened. A forest giant had fallen and invited into its space the sun and the sky. And birdsong. (Prime transitional habitat, I’ve since learned.)
Mom spotted a yellow streak come to rest on a bare branch and begin to sing. I focused. What is this?! Never had one of these on the feeder outside my dorm window, never saw one snagging worms on the front lawn. And listen to it sing! What?!
That Chestnut Sided Warbler is the first bird in my list. Well, make that lists: pocket notebooks, index cards, the backs of trail maps. And of the course the database on my hard drive, which has swelled to megabytes. But what’s the big deal? Thirty-five years old and writing down the name of a bird? What?
I wasn’t a Nature-deprived child. We played outdoors until the street lights blinked on. Caught fireflies in our hands and honey bees in jars. Raised tadpoles to peepers. Camps, beach trips, hiking, Scouts; I was out in Nature pretty much, but I count that CSW as the moment I began to notice. This is not just an unpopulated landscape, not a homogenous backdrop for picnics or games or a nice walk. These are things. Individuals. Differentiated. Species. I start by counting birds but then I notice wildflowers and take up botany, notice one side of the ridge has more blossoms and different, it’s geology, get down on my knees for the tiniest blooms and dang there’s a beetle, entomology.
Pretty soon I want to notice it all, the great grand beautiful interconnected mess, ecology, the parts and the whole. I’m becoming a Naturalist – someone who pays attention. Someone who notices.
Chestnut Sided Warbler in Virginia was my gateway drug. How much was I missing all those years before? Now I can’t help but notice. Blame the wrens that scold me every morning in the driveway. Blame my friend Mike who is always so careful to step over every millipede on the trail. Blame Amelia my granddaughter as she watches the crocuses open. And after last weekend blame Emily Stein* as my chief enabler, she and the other twenty hard core Naturalists I joined at Tremont in the Smokies for an intense course in “Skills for Sharing Nature.” As always, begin with some questions:
Where have I come from to reach this place? Why do I care? What is my personal story? What do I have to share?
The answers may arrive like spring buds that swell along the flank of the mountain seeking the summit, a lifetime of questions and answers, but now it’s time to screw up my courage and take Step 2: I’m going to get you hooked on Nature, too. Come here a minute. Try my binoculars. See that little dab of brown fluff that just flew up to that branch? Yes, that’s the one. Let’s see what he has to tell us.
. . . . . . .
* Emily Stein: Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont naturalist educator, youth programs coordinator, and instructor for the February 2020 course “Skills for Sharing Nature,” part of the Southern Appalachian Naturalist Certification Program (SANCP). More information at www.gsmit.org
. . . . . . .
Prayer for the Great Family
Gratitude to Mother Earth, sailing through night and day—
and to her soil: rich, rare, and sweet
in our minds so be it
Gratitude to Plants, the sun-facing light-changing leaf
and fine root-hairs; standing still through wind
and rain; their dance is in the flowing spiral grain
in our minds so be it
Gratitude to Air, bearing the soaring Swift and the silent
Owl at dawn. Breath of our song
clear spirit breeze
in our minds so be it
Gratitude to Wild Beings, our brothers, teaching secrets,
freedoms, and ways, who share with us their milk;
self-complete, brave, and aware
in our minds so be it
Gratitude to Water: clouds, lakes, rivers, glaciers;
holding or releasing; streaming through all
our bodies salty seas
in our minds so be it
Gratitude to the Sun: blinding pulsing light through
trunks of trees, through mists, warming caves where
bears and snakes sleep—he who wakes us—
in our minds so be it
Gratitude to the Great Sky
who holds billions of stars—and goes yet beyond that—
beyond all powers, and thoughts
and yet is within us—
Grandfather Space.
The Mind is his Wife.
so be it.
Gary Snyder (after a Mohawk prayer)
from EARTH PRAYERS, edited by Elizabeth Roberts and Elias Amidon, HarperSanFrancisco, 1991
. . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
Thank you for this beauty and wonder and love!
LikeLike
Thanks to you, too, fellow Traveler.
LikeLike
Another great post from a great writer. I’m beginning to see that Frank picked up his writing style from you, Bill. All those camp logs from High Adventure Camps. He was paying attention. Thanks for your many positive influences.
I was the same as you when I was younger. Attending many summer youth camps and not really noticing the beautiful nature around me, only the beautiful people. Now I notice both. Had to have my eyes opened by other forces around me. Gradually became more and more interested. Now I’m hooked. Can’t go back (nor would I ever want to). I think that being a naturalist is a profound blessing. One of the best I’ve ever been given. Only wish I’d found it much sooner! -Mike
LikeLike
Mike, I feel like I learned how to learn by watching and listening to you. Here’s to some more trail teamwork in our future together. BILL
LikeLike
Great post, Bill.
LikeLike
Great Post. I am a nature lover myself, but watch the birds, the deer and squirrels from my deck and my living room now.
LikeLike
Thank you for your lovely post, the poem, and photos. It’s wonderful to spread the wonders of our mother planet. There is no substitute. Right now in my small town back yard, four pine siskins are loving the suet.
LikeLike
I began to love – and name – individual plants during a summer course in the Black Hills, studying Botany. Love of insects has followed. I love the birds, but have a hard time seeing them….they move around too fast for me…
I have always loved introducing others to the plants and creatures dear to my heart. I am pleased to hear this is a skill that will be taught.
LikeLike
Thanks, Deb, good to hear from you. Hope you’re getting some good hikes in — Bill
LikeLike