Category Archives: Nature

Dark and Light

The gym opened its doors to a stream of friends and family of members, refugees from the storm’s aftermath, and I waited in a line of ladies for the showers. Hot water! Bright lights! Still no electricity at the Cabin, not since Monday night. We combed the shelves of various supermarkets yesterday for more bottled water and candles (ended up settling for stubby shabbat candles and the tall votive ones  I think of as voodoo candles – everything else was gone), then waited in a line for gas, all of us filling jugs for the generator.

The big downed trees now lay off the side of the roads, but plenty of streets are still cordoned off and you have to be creative to get to your destination.

Our plumbing, run by electricity, is kaput, so the toilets smell like a latrine, but we can spare precious water once in a while to flush by pouring into the tank. Gil has rediscovered the old, leaning outhouse. We’re eating sandwiches off paper plates, but the fridge is on the generator so we have cold beer. The tv’s powered by the generator too, so we can compare our petty inconveniences with the real disasters out there. The generator can’t get everything going; choices must be made. And lights and water are too big burdens on the system. Instead we have News 4 and Halloween flicks – last night The Thing with Kurt Russell. It was 40 below in Antarctica when the slimy monster attacked, and 42 in our living room even with a roaring fire.

This is the picture to go with my post yesterday about the sinking of the Bounty.

Sinking of the Bounty

Mother Nature laid a cruel hand on the Jersey shore, where people went for years thinking they were just so lucky to have sunny, gentle beachfront property. And when I look at the aerial view of Manhattan – half dark – impossible! We can’t reach downtown friends there by phone or online. I keep thinking of that shocking shot in The Day After Tomorrow when a Russian ship sails into midtown Manhattan, the waters of New York Bay having overflowed. There could never be water in the streets of Manhattan!

Tonight I’ll speak in a clean, well-lighted place, the public library in Dobbs Ferry. I’ll talk about a time long ago, when people ate their dinner by candlelight and trundled off to bed in the pitch dark, when sturdy ships went down as if they were fragile toy boats, when disasters regularly occurred and there was no FEMA to the rescue. Imagine Blandine van Couvering taking her sloop up the Hudson on a moonless voyage at just this time of year, how her enthusiasm for her adventure warmed her and lit up the night, much, much brighter than any iphone flashlight app.

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Solid Gold

Our two downed cedars, lying side by side with their feet propped up.

You can’t see the length of the trunks but they are easily sixty feet tall. We are so lucky they didn’t fall the other direction, toward the cabin.

If we get these guys removed, they’ll be chopped up for firewood. In another age they would be a true windfall. When Europeans first came to America they combed the forests for mast wood — exactly like these straight, hard trunks. All the tallest trees had been all used up in England, and they needed masts for the King’s Navy. A solid mast was essential in the Age of Sail; without whole trees, smaller ones would have to be cobbled together with a weaker result. A fir mast like the one that didn’t crush the cabin would have helped float a ship of 500 tons.

But a strong mast didn’t make a foolproof ship. They went down in droves, their men perishing. A reminder of this reality is the sinking of the 180-foot, three-masted ship HMS Bounty during Sandy, off the coast of Cape Hatteras in North Carolina. The Bounty was built in Nova Scotia for the 1962 film Mutiny on the Bounty, and has since been used in the Pirates of the Caribbean films. The captain is still missing.

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Stormy Weather

Major casualty of the storm for us: downed tree smashed the Suburu.

And when we walked out this morning two ancient 60-foot cedars lay stretched side by side on the ground next to the stream, their huge circular root systems propped up in dirt disks, right next to the dog cemetery. Like an old couple that decided to take cyanide at the same time. Probably that was the CRACK we heard. We lost power last night but managed to make do with candles, pot roast and The Odyssey read aloud by Ian McKellan. And a roaring fire. We count ourselves incredibly lucky not to have been situated under one of those cedars, lucky not to be at the center of the storm in Atlantic City or the Rockaways.

I managed my worries by knitting a cowl out of the Odyssey, with Aegean coloration, that worked like soft armor against the drizzle this morning.

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Update

Gil drove home from Wisconsin over 23 hours (4 for sleep) and crossed the Tappan Zee without getting blown off the bridge.  When you see an empty Interstate highway, he says, you’ve seen the apocalypse. Wisconsin cheese and beer in hand. Out the cabin window, the reeds bowing low in the marsh. A gigantic crash. Oliver bored: what’s the fuss?

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A Fleeing Mouse

Sitting in the living room watching the reeds blow madly outside — no fallen branches yet. Pelting raindrops.

A mouse scuttled up the wall, disappearing into the ceiling timbers, much to Oliver’s curiosity. Like rats fleeing a sinking ship, I suppose, it’s riled up by the storm.

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Before the Storm

Ominous outside. On the grass along the parkway, a dead bloodied dear  in the shadow of a dozen wild turkeys — didn’t know they were carnivores.

The wind whips up the leaves. Children crowd the soccer field, laughing unable to imagine what’s ahead. Chores done, candles collected, Oliver and I await the storm.

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Juicing the Apple

I am inspired by a cider mill down the road that sells heirloom apples, some of which it grows and some it brings in. Weathered wooden crates hold one to two dozen varieties, bright green to deep red, all labeled with their place and date of origin.

Imagine biting into an apple Thomas Jefferson raised, about which he wrote from Paris: “they have no apples here to compare with our Newtown Pippin.”

At Thompson Cider Mill I can find apples of the perfect flavor and shape and texture to bake into the dessert I call Apple Bombs, flaky pastry fixed in a package around a whole cored apple stuffed with butter and brown sugar, so that each dinner has their own individual, spherical apple pie.

There is an intense, hard, black apple that looks beautiful in a bowl on the table. It’s so vintage, you feel you’d have to go through a worm hole back in time (not through the apple) to find it, but here it is for you in a neat shed in 2012, ready to be collected into your shopping basket.

The Apples of New York, published before the turn of the 20th century by Spencer Ambrose Beach and now digitized, spells out nearly 400 varieties of the fruit, with lavish illustrations. It is the Audobon of apples.

Thompson Cider Mill has all new machinery to press its complex, perfumey cider. You could be drinking a combination of a dozen or more varieties, including Macoun, McIntosh, Rhode Island Greening, Northwest Greening, Jonagold, Winter Banana, Golden Russet, Idared, Winesap, Jonathan, Mutsu, Monroe, Baldwin, Fuji, Cortland, Spygold, Red Spy, Northern Spy, Pippin, Seek-No-Further, or local Golden or Red Delicious. When you take a sip, you’re drinking history.

Maybe I like the place so much because I can find my namesake fruit there.

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Hooded Heads

End of October. Having had their fill of sunflower seeds — hanging upside down on the flopped over, giant heads as if they were hanging from a lampost — the tufted titmice (pl. titmouse?) have flown. It seems so silent without their cheee-cheee-cheee.

In Tarrytown, the streets are decked out for Halloween with witches hanging from lamposts and homemade scarecrows tied to parking meters, each one topped by a tilting pillowcase — faceless hoods worthy of Abu Ghraib. Did the town fathers think of that when they came up with the design? Or was the connection implied?

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Places of Magic II

The first thing I saw as we hiked out from the Cabin this afternoon was an eight-point buck bounding across the face of the woods, and of course Oliver gave chase. When we reunited at the leaf-carpeted clearing (I saw dug-out hoof indentations in the soft dirt all the way up the hill) the dog was still roving in circles, nose stuck to the ground. He seemed pretty pleased with himself.

After the Chase

In the clearing, a blue jay muscled around from branch to branch around me, showing off. I saw a building foundation down the slope that I’d never seen before, and realized I was standing atop a berm created by a wall of giant boulders.

On this particular dreamy afternoon, it would have seemed almost normal to run into some gargantuan natural apparation, like the Stratosphere Giant of the Redwood National Park in California, 370 feet tall (the Statue of Liberty is 305 feet).

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Places of Magic

I’ve always liked this vine-topped stone gate about a half mile down Cedar Lane from the Cabin.

So mysterious. It would appear to lead nowhere, but appearances can be deceiving. Maybe it’s the entry to the skeleton dance, or the blue jay coven, or maybe it’s where Oliver goes when he disappears at night, where he hangs with the foxes.

Went to another magical location this afternoon — Oliver led me through the raspberry prickers in the woods to a mystically open hillside with a spread of golden leaves, the glow of autumn hanging in the air — a Brothers Grimm kind of place. Then I pried out of the pit hound’s smiling mouth a small yellowed bone with a knuckle, exactly like the orphan’s digit in The Orphanmaster. The signet ring in the book would have been too much to ask, I guess.

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A Flat, a Fox

Sometimes things happen for a reason. Today, for example, I broke down with a flat tire on the Sprain Brook Parkway and had to wait an hour for the garage to come put on the spare. I was much later getting home on this perfect fall day than I wanted to be.

But. As I got near home on my spare, the same road I drive down every day, my road, Cedar Lane, and pulled up to the stop sign, what did I see caroming along the property right next to where I was halted, about ten yards away? A red fox. Wild-looking, brushed with black. It had a look of slight puzzlement: how did I land in this stretch of suburbia? Then it turned tail and dove into the woods, toward my house.

I’d make that trade any day, a flat tire for a fox sighting.

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The Frog Who Wouldn’t Leave

This guy simply sat there on the porch, just outside the front door, as Gil, Oliver and I passed him back and forth this morning. Awaiting an invitation?

“Theories pass. The frog remains.”    Jean Rostand, biologist

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A Little Bit of Not Much

Mini-tornados whipping the treetops, branches cracking to the ground, frogs jumping across the wet roads… when you’re inside watching movies about wind and trees and wet roads…

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The Flow of the Jet Stream

I actually read something wonderful in The New York Times. About the change from summer to fall, the feeling of it in the air:

“In the cocoon of the home, in the unaccustomed silence lately filled by the air-conditioner, the air flowing in feels, smells, tastes different — not just because it is cooler, but also because it is different air, hailing from a different part of the planet. Sultry summer nights are made of stiflingly hot air from Southwestern deserts simmered with emanations from the Gulf of Mexico into a thick gumbo. But now the jet stream, the ever-flowing border zone between hot and cold air masses, is making its tentative, give-and-take pilgrimage southward, and on cool nights, the air is fresh from the pine forests of Canada.”

Inhale deeply. This is magical sleeping weather.

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Web of Facts

A wolf spider facing off against a honeybee. Now those are two worthy opponents, currently tussling in a cozy corner of the porch rail against a curtain of cicada racket.

A lot like me today confronting my article for the Times T Magazine, scrambling around within my web in an attempt to provide facts for the checkers in the research department. No, the metaphor is not perfect. But it is amazing that for this breezy story of 1,000 words (really an excuse for a lavish design pictorial)  I can dish up 48 annotations. A far cry from book publishing, when it is hoped you know your stuff but no one has the interest/time? to challenge you.

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