black crowned night heron

June 6, 2004


My goodness it's cold. Rainy too. I'd had a notion to go for a walk on the East Bay Bike Path but I soon thought better of it.

We went out to brunch at Andrea's (the restaurant on Thayer St., not my niece's house) and browsed for a very long time at the Brown Bookstore. I noticed a book entitled Walden Pond on the New England shelf and picked it up automatically. Anything having to do with Thoreau has to get a chance to be in my library. It's a history of Walden Pond, the pond, rather than just Walden the book. It starts with the gates opening to let in fishermen at 5:00 AM. Wow! That brought back a flood of memories of first day of fishing season with my Dad at Walden. I could almost feel the damp spring air as I read it. I could definitely see my Dad in my mind's eye and the boat and the early morning sun on the water and the fish...

Fishing and swimming were Walden to me. Besides the early morning fishing trips, there were late afternoon swims and picnic suppers on the concrete wall by the Red Cross beach on hot summer nights. We'd meet my Dad there as it was on his way home from work. His carpool would drop him off there. La Madre (who had yet to be named La Madre then and was mundanely referred to as Mom) would pack sandwiches and fruit and all of us into the car and we'd arrive when the day's crowds had thinned but there was still plenty of light and swimming time left. I couldn't tell you now what was in a single one of those sandwiches, but I do remember that they tasted awfully good after a swim.

I knew about Thoreau then but only as some famous writer guy who had lived there once. I didn't read Walden until my junior year in high school. When we were swimming and fishing there in those days, the reproduction of his cabin had not yet been built. The location of Thoreau's cabin was marked and signs pointed the way. As soon as I was old enough to go off by myself to look for it -- a much younger age than kids would be allowed to be out of their parents' sight nowadays -- I did. It wasn't a literary pilgrimage then, just a walk in the woods.

As I read on I realized that many great writers had felt the call to pilgrimage at Walden but somehow it never seemed like a pilgrimage to me. It was part of the geography of my life. As I got older I would ride my bike there in all seasons; looking for sprouting acorns in the fall; testing the ice for skating in winter; and always always the beginning of fishing season in the spring. The only time it felt genuinely like a pilgrimage was when I brought some of the rocks from my Dad's collection, which I'd inherited when he died, to add to the cairn as much to pay homage to Walden Pond itself as to Thoreau.

Need I say I bought the book even though it was outrageoulsy priced at $35.

With my head all full of Walden memories and philosophical thoughts on fishing (it's those darned stressed out bait fish from the other day), I needed to be in "nature." At Bold Point Park I got out my binoculars to watch one of the terns that lives on the derelict old barge chase off a gull. Nancy and I call the barge the tern barge because common terns used to nest there. They still use it, but I'm told they don't nest there, just rest and hunt, nowadays. Urban terns. Think of it. If people ever decide to gentrify the East Providence waterfront they'd darn well better leave that barge alone no matter how ugly and rotten it is.

So, I'm watching the terns when I see an immature black crowned night heron roosting in the barge. There's a series of cubbyholes near the water line. The black crowned night heron looked as if it were framed by the cubbyhole. I wished I had my camera with me. I wished that even more when I looked a little to the left and saw an adult also roosting in a different cubbyhole. The two of them looked like they were in some kind of shadowbox. The adult's long white head plumes streamed out from its black cap in the wind. It looked magnificent. The two of them stayed there for a long time. Nancy made me take the umbrella so I wouldn't get totally soaked in the rain. I watched the terns go back and forth off the top of the barge and the black crowned night herons hanging out at the bottom. Finally the adult turned and walked into the inside of the barge and out of site. The younger one stayed where it was. We got back in the car to get warm and to will Derek Lowe to finally have a good outing.

Today's Bird Sightings
Bold Point, Providence RI
common tern 2
black crowned night heron 2
double crested cormorant 8
mallard 4
mute swan 1
northern mockingbird 1
American robin 3

Watchemocket Cove
common tern 1
Canada goose 8
domestic goose 1
starling 4
house sparrow 4
ring billed gull 10
herring gull 10
snowy egret 2
mallard 23

Today's Reading
Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynne Truss, Walden Pond by W. Barksdale Maynard

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Derek Lowe


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan