Lessons from the Potato, the Heron, the Hazel Nut, and the White-tailed Longtail

“A team of researchers analyzed data going back decades about the tropicbird population and sightings of it, and found that since the 1950s the average date of the first observation of a white-tailed longtail is now 20 to 25 days earlier, a one-day shift every three years. That means the birds are now arriving in Bermuda in February, not March.”

I planted potatoes for the first time ever BEFORE St. Patrick’s Day.  The greater blue heron has returned to its aerie a full two weeks earlier than ever before. Catkins on the hazel nuts were early surviving even below zero temps.

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Finally, here is a poem I wrote about early Spring several springs ago:

Vernal not Viral
(with thanks to Kim D for the original poem which appears here:
A vernal virus, 
the temperature in our ground is rising,
warming by quarter degrees, 
infecting us all
from concave to convex, 
from gerund to verb, 
from male to female and back again. 
Even in masks
we are unmasked, 
we’re itching
to be
unveiled 
to the vernal,
showing our naked sprung selves 
to the gyre and whirl 
all about us.
running, playing, lazing in the sun,
we are magnified by a lens 
of our own making, 
sunned and tanned and lasered by 
the rising, warm, yeasty tide of fermentation, 
not viral violence,
instead a hoedown of stomping and hooting. 
Like cats we look for that puddle of light 
that will evaporate 
the cold and dark of winter’s shadow,
a shimmer that happens first
on the wall of my log home, 
a letter written with nine-light-minute ink 
on logs likely to have grown 
before our wee mewing Republic
was nary a glimmer,
creating a tunnel of green,
Pan, at the helm, 
burrowing with borrowed light 
at the gates of dawn 
straight into the bloody, raw Spring,
toward but not reaching Summer…
not yet.
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2 Comments


  1. // Reply

    Like Daniel, I did not see this the first time you posted it. Your observations made me think of a book I read a couple of months ago called Hurricane Lizards and Plastic Squid by biologist Thor Hanson. He describes the reactions/changes taking place among animals and plants due to climate change. His analysis is more hopeful than some I’ve read.

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