Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Today at Iten's Acres: Pond Thoughts January 29, 2014

As I lounged this morning in the green chair and took in another Arctic morning at the Acres, for some reason, my thoughts turned to the pond. The Homesteader is trying valiantly to cat nap in my lap and ignore the bird population feasting outside the front doorwindows, but she doesn't do very well. Too much cat. The tail starts to swish, and I know she'll be gone in a moment, jumping up on the glass, smug in her ability to make the entire flock panic and head for the bushes. How is it that they always seem to take off as one entity? Pounce, whirr, empty patio--all in an instant. Then, they return, piecemeal, never as the flock that fled but one at a time. Then, it's back to my lap for the white dish rag, the stretch, tail swish, pounce. History in the making this morning at Iten's Acres--doomed to repeat itself all morning.
But where was I? Oh, yeah, the pond. I think it was Bonnie, the Queen of the now defunct Outlaws, that triggered my thoughts. (Usually, it's the squirrels that trigger my thoughts, but that's another rabbit trail.) The black and white beauty was out early this morning, frolicking, headed to visit her home-bound friend Gus and the little beagle. If the mutt can't come to the Queen, the Queen will go to visit the mutt. Usually, she meanders around the pond on her way to visit her subjects, but today she took advantage of the weather and gingerly slid her way across the frozen pond. Shortcut. And so the seemingly irrelevant journey of my lovely furry friend started my old brain musing about the pond at Iten's Acres.
It's actually not much of a pond. Lots of cattails. The monstrous limbs that have fallen off The Sentinel rise out of the water near the edge farthest from the house. It's surrounded by tall grass and a few trees--four white crab apples, a river birch, a weeping willow, a pussy willow, a couple of pines, a couple of redbuds, an elderberry, four rose of Sharon, and some things I can't name. In the spring it will have a serious case of daffodil ring around the collar. Can't hurt to imagine spring's beauty on a day like today, can it? Think early March--imagine: hundreds of white and yellow daffodils, the cloud of silver that is the pussy willow, the deep lilac that is the redbud, the white mounds of crab apple blossoms, the flashes of black and red that are the red-winged blackbirds searching out home sites for the females that will be coming later, all mingling with the greens of the pines and the new leaves on the weeping willow and river birch. Hmm. How long is it until spring?
Anyway, what I was actually thinking about was the wild life that inhabits the pond. The place is always full of peepers and bull frogs and tadpoles. How will they survive such a frozen winter? Normally, they are safe burrowed into the mud at the bottom of the pond, but what if the cold has been so severe that the pond froze all the way to the bottom? And what about the water snake that haunts the place? Where does he spend the winter? And the turtles that love so much to sit on The Sentinel's benches and sun themselves--how are they doing? I hope they are all well. A pond--even if it is more of a mud hole--needs its denizens.
And as I have bemoaned many times, there are no fish--not even minnows. Some day--I know, I say that every year--I will have to change that. I remember growing up in St. Louis the time that my friends the Curralls had purchased a farm, and we went into "business" as pond stockers. We walked to Forrest Park and slipped down into their sluice ways and caught baby fish by the "tons" that were washed over the small dams. Filled up our buckets, walked back home, Rich and Gary took the buckets to their farm, and presto, stocked ponds. Maybe I'll have to sneak back into St. Louis some dark and stormy night, bring some buckets, slide into the sluice ways, and bring some fish back to Ohio. I don't think I'll walk though. I suppose there's an easier way. I'll have to meditate on it. But my pond and the Acres just don't feel complete with no fish in the old water hole. I mean someone has to feed the blue heron?
Anyway, that's my musings for this cold day at the Acres. I haven't taken a walk yet Joy, but I will. I can handle a warm Arctic day I think. Just not those minus 20 ones. Hey, I am an old man! Be kind.

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