ordinary life in spring

March 24, 2003


Intro

I started a bunch of entries and then deleted them all. It feels weird to write about ordinary life. I feel like I should be writing something really profound and serious but I am at a loss for words. I read aloud Du Fu's Ballad of the Army Carts to anyone who will listen. Poetry is useful for these times. It compresses the essence of overwhelming feelings and experience into some kind of manageable expression.

Meanwhile in ordinary life, some highlights of last week from the entries that would have been:

Thursday

Winston got adopted. He's the adorable and vocal Siamese who inexplicably tested positive for FIV though he was an indoor cat. Anyway, he's found a home with no other cats.

I mentioned before that Toby likes to play. A lot. Actually Toby likes to play so much that he wears out the volunteers. He begged me to play with him by leading me to the long string toy he likes and looking up at me with a pleading look and a plaintive meow. So I started playing with him. He jumps higher than any adult cat I've ever seen and with more enthusiasm. Tony got in on the act too for awhile. It was hilarious watching old Tony with his street cat looks playing with Toby. Toby kept playing after Tony wandered away. After more than 10 minutes of this I was getting quite tired of waving that string thing around. It's physically demanding :-). A new volunteer who is developmentally delayed was washing the dishes but didn't want to wash the litter boxes. Betsy who had just finished cleaning the quarantine room offered to wash the litter boxes for him instead. I piped up, "I'll do them if you'll play with Toby." So Betsy took over playing with Toby. About 5 to 7 minutes later, Toby has tired out Betsy and she hands the string over to the new guy. Toby wore him out too.

Friday

Another new ice sound: the sound of ice floes hitting a barge. Each collision features a hollow ping followed by a slushy splat and a shushing sound as the ice floe hits and then slides under the barge.

Another sign of spring: the barge. It's here to resume work on the bridge now that the ice is out. You can't really make it out in the picture but the barge has a URL painted on the side: www.bridgeriggers.com. They've got some nice pictures of other bridges they've worked on at their web site.

Proof that that great blue heron does move sometimes: when I arrived at the bridge the great blue heron was perched on the top of a pine tree. Think he can see fish from up there?

I didn't see any bald eagles from the bridge but the great cormorants are still there.

Sunday

G*d's own plenty of scaup are cavorting in Providence Harbor off Bold Point but do you think we could find that wily little tufted duck among them? No such luck. I'm told there were some red necked grebes among them too but with the sun in my eyes and everything moving I couldn't spot them.

Colt State Park is still full of brant and horned larks. What did horned larks do for habitat before parking lots were invented?

And Today

It's another gorgeous day in the northeast corner of the world's only superpower.

I continue to plow through my collection of whaling memoirs. Sails and Whales covered the late 19th/early 20th century, when steam engines began to be used to power the winches and stuff but most everything else was done the old fashioned way and New Bedford had already begun to fade from major city status. Of Whales and Men is about mid-20th century whaling aboard the Norwegian factory ships with huge crews (700+ men), modern tools, and differently quarry (blue whales and finbacks for eating and elephant seals for oil as opposed to the earlier sperm and right whales for oil and whalebone). Of Whales and Men describes South Georgia as the slum of the Southern Ocean. I guess with all that decaying whale offal stinking up the place, the gemlike scenery was lost on the men. Also, the elephant seals are much more scenic and beautiful alive than in try pots being turned into seal oil. Oh, and by this time in whaling history New Bedford had turned to textiles, which were about to decline too. The writer speaks of New Bedford as one speaks of ancient Rome or ancient Athens: a place that was once important in history and where the museums and ruins still tell the story.

Today's Reading
Life and Letters of Lafcadio Hearn by Elizabeth Bisland, Of Whales and Men by R.B. Robertson

This Year's Reading
2003 Book List


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Copyright © 2003, Janet I. Egan