Monday, April 8, 2013

4.8.13 A Quiet Spring Walk With Shiva Louisa Latrine





Saturday was a brisk and cold New England day, wind wrapping round our home by the range, the same wind slipping down the conservation fields into the ravines and veering through outwaters of ducks and geese and coyote and turtle, breakneck speed down to the old and powerful Connecticut River.

In early spring evening, I woke Shiva from her 15 year old slumber upon our low bed, and urged her to come out, come out for a drive and a walk. Increasingly, she has less interest, and as is important with older humans who begin to pull inward at times, at times exhibiting less of an urge to go forth and mix it up in the world, so too sweet old dogs need at times urging to get someplace other than house and yard a couple of times a day. So down the stairs her old, almost  blind self came, allowed me to slip on her collar, took the hint, and out we went toward the car.

I opened the door, at which  point she moved to leap her front legs up while I lifted the back, and settled her into the back. Up the drive, and down the mountain we went, the sun already moving briskly in its path, or rather the earth, which being human, we tend to forget.


Down at the bottom of the hill, as the Connecticut spread out before us, were two deer down from the woods, relishing the rich greenery of the field.  Farther down, as we followed twists and turns and hills and dales, were a pair of Redwing Hawks twirling far up above us, their courtship aswirl with blazes of red and then reflective beautiful white feathered breasts, all caught up in their tumult.

Up into a small college town, then through and back down another hill, we finally arrived at the small pond, inching through students and crossing the small metal bridge. The path familiar to her, she began to peer about, and restlessly waiting for the back door to open; for the lift of sweet old body onto solid ground, and the stroll to begin.



Out on the pond I spotted the white Gander who has been  a resident of the pond for years, a beautiful large goose who one day discovered their wing feathers let go by their farmer just enough to somehow take flight, and take flight they did…somehow finding their perfect home, it seems, a “Make Way For Ducklings” story of safe pond free of fox and coyote due to its proximity to studetns strolling near and far, the surrounding buildings a helpful foil to predators.

Last year I walked here, and there was the Gander, up on the lawn with a group of Canadians, the Gander carefully scrutinizing every passerby, protecting their temporary flock as they all aerated the lawns and fertilized the grounds. In the winter, the Canadian Geese have flown, and the Gander stays, at times kept company by ducks to protect, and at times fed in the cold by the college.



Today there was the Gander, proudly by the side of a female Candian,and he was doing his hard work to keep the three unattached males away, as he and his beloved wandered the pond, nibbling and cuddling and staying close together. I do wonder how this will be, as Canadians tend to mate for life, and this is the first I have seen him with partner. But a few years ago, down farther on the Connecticut, by Northampton, there was a couple that lived by the bridge, biracial or biavian, one huge grey goose, one Canadian, and we all watched them with delight for months.



There are other Geese couples on the pond, I imgine settling in to raise a brood, in such a safe, clean home for the summer, safe enough humans and tethered dogs passing by now and then, the rich stream rushing through.



Later in the spring the days will warm, the deep silt beneath the waters will soften and the legions of turtles will awaken, to be seen sunning themselves on the fallen trees extending out from the banks. The eels will begin to come up the eel ladder into the pond, undetected by humans, and make their elegant way up the stream to their own laying areas.



Overhead one enormous Broad Wing Hawk is circling, lazily. Known to be more territorial than most, they may be announcing and establishing their own territory, as the sun does sink lower, and we pass over the eel ladder bridge, and round the last side of pond before the walk is done.


Old willows are coming into blossom, one of my favorite parts of spring, their endless fronds yellow with new leaf and flower, swaying and dancing with any small breeze. Today there is a chorus of Starling atop the Willows , readying for bedtime, chipping and chirping and tweeting and clipping and singing to themselves and each other, far atop the trees, such a cacaphony of warm, well fed nattering as we slowly pass them by.



Shiva has successfully peed upon every place every dog has ever urinated upon, and , fully satisfied with her dominance, we slowly make our way back to the car, she now tired, and happy to be carefully lifted into the back.

At home, I work down her old spine, touching base with irritated discs and sore knees and ankles and shoulders, slipping her a pellet of homeopathic Arnica, holding her muzzle gently and murmuring the benefits for after a long old-dog-walk, pre-empting stiff soreness the next day.

She takes her freshly cooked turkey and her dry good with great relish, and settles on the bed to dip deep into slumber, her snuffled old snoring music to us all. 

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