It is quite calm, so much so that I can spot shed feathers on the top of the water from a couple hundred feet away. As I cross the mouth of the bay from Portage Point to Wilson's Point, two kayakers pass by just far enough away that a greeting would be a disturbance rather than a pleasantry. So, we all stay silent. They cut a route straight across the widest part of the bay, deliberate and purposeful as if they are en route to someplace. I paddle the shorelines, the edges of the landscape where most things are and most things happen, and I watch for something, anything, different. It seems as if I, too, am en route to someplace. But, unlike the kayakers I don't know where my someplace will be. I may even paddle right past my someplace without recognizing it. It may just be that my someplace is always someplace ahead of me. I find this uncertainty comforting.
Near the West Lodge, I stop to check the mud for tracks. I find beaver, raccoon, duck and some small mammal with sharp little claws. By the Workbench Lodge my ear catches a bird call that isn't quite in my memory. I paddle on, but catching a glimpse of it through the brush, I double back. A pileated woodpecker comes bobbing up in its stubby winged flight pattern from a dead birch. It is where I do not expect to see it.
Volcanic Ash at Palmer Lake
1 week ago
3 comments:
Nice post... love the woodpecker photo.
We have Flickers, but I really want to see one of those very large woodpeckers!
I read your blog now share great information here.
Acrylic Paddles
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