It never ceases to amaze me.
Tag Archives: weather
Later that day at Eagle Creek State Park in Illinois
I’ll write about the past weekend later. You have been warned.
Live from Wolf Creek State Park in Illinois
Fishing for eagles
Today there are treatments for almost anything. We’ve advanced from the standard alcohol addiction and/or drug addiction to Internet addiction and sex addiction — and, of course, Internet sex addiction. Has any entrepreneurial spirit come up with a way to address eagle addiction?
J.’s new-found interest in the bald eagles of Plum Island led him to invest in a more powerful lens and a tripod to support it. For the third consecutive Saturday, we hit I-80 southwest bound for the Starved Rock State Park area.
This time, however, we turned left at the road before the bridge over the mighty Illinois toward the Illinois Waterway Visitor Center, from where you can watch the eagles from indoors or out. The center is next to the Starved Rock Lock and Dam, so if any barges or tugs happen to come through, you’d be on top of the action. Last week we’d watched from Starved Rock on the opposite shore as an enormous barge-train crept by at what seemed to be a painfully slow speed. This week, of course, now that we were in a perfect position to view the operation of the lock, the only sign of human life on the river was a rowboat with an outboard motor that appeared mid-afternoon, steering from below Plum Island to the base of Starved Rock, then back down river. I did learn that the “pretty red crane” hovering near the lock is from a Maryland construction site and has been reconfigured to heft a mere 360 tons. It sits there, pining for the opportunity to be of service again.
Inside the building visitors find an eclectic mix of education and artifacts related to river transport and area wildlife. A pilot house dominates the center, while the perimeter walls and cases tend to showcase animals, including stuffed birds and even a river otter, as well as beaver pelts and a deer skin. One case highlights the paraphernalia of the French-Indian fur-trading days — all great stuff. You can even buy amazing photos of the bald eagles, including a roosting eagle studiously ignoring an invading squirrel and two eagles squabbling mid-flight over a fish (which seems to be a favorite pastime). You can head outdoors from either the first or second floor, where a deck wraps around the river side of the building.
From this northern shore, the roosting eagles seemed more back lit as seen through my binoculars. J. got to work right away setting up the camera and tripod, soon exchanging the 300 mm lens for the new 500 mm. He moved around and clicked away happily, although the perched eagles seemed the most game for some flying and fishing action when he was tied up changing film. There’s nothing like hearing, “Oooh! Look at that!” just as you’ve taken out the used film and are putting in the fresh film.
The disadvantage of the visitor center is that you get no walking or climbing exercise, and the view, being lower, is not as sweeping. On the positive side, you can go indoors to warm up and use the bathroom if necessary (yes, several times), and you can sit when you get tired or achy from standing (yes, several times). While J. snapped away for hours, I could sit and wait in comfort without freezing.
From the lock side, you enjoy a great view of Starved Rock and its neighbor, Lovers Leap. Looking at these sandstone bluffs along the river across the steel and mechanisms of the lock, I wondered again how these wonders appeared to the area’s first human inhabitants in their unspoiled state and how man, with his incremental alterations of the landscape over thousands of years, has become so inured to his effects that the lock and dam are accepted as a necessary part of the river. With enough effort, I can imagine looking across the unsullied water at the opposite shore, but I can’t imagine away all the remnants of the Rust Belt I see from on board Amtrak from Chicago to Altoona, ranging from abandoned tools and bridges to entire blocks of blight. And so much of it is so we can earn money to buy things we used to know how to raise or make ourselves, or things we don’t need but that marketing and peer pressure and envy have convinced us that we have to to have. What vital cargo was last week’s ponderous barge-train hauling, anyway?
Indefatigably, J. continued to shoot photos while I rested inside. After 3 o’clock, when the center mysteriously emptied out, I tried its popular Swarovski telescope, which affords an amazing view. The huge eagle everyone reported seeing at the top in the middle proved to be a pair. I could see the color of their eyes and feet, not visible even through my binoculars. Even better, they weren’t just stationary lumps in the trees, as they appear to be at a distance. Through the telescope I could see that they move their heads nearly constantly, ever vigilant for a glimpse of a fish. I could be mistaken, but it appeared the pair coordinated their relative positions and movements to cover as wide an angle as possible. I suspect they look for more than fish. With their vision, they should be able to spot unsuspecting rabbits and squirrels on the mainland. (I’ve seen video of a nesting bald eagle contentedly plucking out and swallowing a rabbit’s eye, a sight that, like Scotland, is not for the squeamish.) If only J. could take photos with the closeness and clarity of the telescopic view!
After watching a couple of pre- or young teen girls spend an inordinate amount of time and energy playing in the pilot house (on in particular attached herself to the quaint corded phone, as girls will), I checked out the stuffed bird wall display. I’d already gotten on the wrong side of the representative from the Army Corps of Engineers when he had asked if I had any questions, and I’d too quickly answered, “No.” With the obvious exception of the tundra swan, all of the specimens on the wall were raptors — red-tailed hawk — sharp-shinned hawk — great horned owl — barred owl — American kestrel — nighthawk — Nighthawk? Now I had a question: “Who was the wise guy who put the nighthawk in with the raptors?” He seemed taken aback and answered cryptically, “Broken wing.” This didn’t quite answer my question, but the taxidermist had preserved this feature — the nighthawk’s left wing was pinned at an awkward, unnatural angle. Huffily, I thought, he pointed out the swan, as well as the turkey on top of a case against another wall and noted that they were all from the Starved Rock area. Still, I wonder how many people who see the nighthawk and think it’s at home with the raptors. After all these years away from the zoo, I continue to feel the urge to educate. If the Army Corps representative wouldn’t let me have my little joke, someone was going to have to learn all about nighthawks and nightjars. That someone was poor J., who had finally come in after several hours in the cold. The moment he did, the eagles, which had been quiet for some time, suddenly remembered how to fly.
After a peek through the telescope and my lecture about the unfortunately placed nighthawk, we watched the Canada geese, which we hadn’t seen much of previously. A brazen pair landed in the water of the lock, which set off a member of the pair on the land above it. The irate goose flew after first one and then the other of the pair in the water, driving each to the far end. After they were safely hemmed in, the other goose on land flew down to its mate, as though to say, “Let me at them! I’ll show them!”
These geese never shut up. The flock and bands from it came and went the entire afternoon with a constant stream of quacks, grunts, or however you wish to describe their unmistakable — and ceaseless — chatter.
We left a little after 4:30 p.m. with the idea of stopping at Matthiessen State Park. On the road from the visitor center, along which we might see eagles, I’d read, J. spotted an owl perched on a road sign. I missed it. He pulled over, retrieved his camera, and headed toward the sign only to see the owl fly off as another car approached.
On the road to Matthiessen, he noted an indoor amusement park, which struck him given the wealth of natural attractions. I’d been thinking earlier, and the week before, about the sense of boredom that seems to have plagued the rural and small-town teenager since time began. The grass is always greener . . . in the big city . . . where teenagers are equally gifted at finding ways to be bored.
I didn’t explore Matthiessen with J. The impingement syndrome in my left shoulder was especially painful (hence the single-handed binoculars hold), plus I felt like I could use a nap; I hadn’t slept much the night before because of the pain.
Curious about the chipotle meatloaf I keep ordering at Starved Rock Lodge, J. finally asked for the same and seemed to like it. After that, I dozed off and on in the car for the next few hours. I felt almost sick with lack of sleep. And sleeping in a sitting position took the pressure off my shoulder, which was a mercy. Hallelujah.
And now one more time . . .
The lusty month of May, 2009 edition
It’s that time of year when suddenly I notice the signs of spring, or perhaps suddenly they appear.
I spotted one of the first dandelions last week from on board a CTA bus — there was just a scraggly handful of them. Today the lake at 53rd Street is sporting a thick pelt of them Like last year when I first noticed those patches, I wondered why entire swaths of grass were yellow before I realized what they were. I may be mistaken, but I associate dandelions with late March in western New York. Spring’s harbingers seemed to appear a month earlier there. But that could be distance and nostalgia speaking.
Earlier, I’d noticed the bushes at the Flamingo sprouting leaves. Last weekend, finally they appeared on some of my favorite trees, including the horse chestnut across the way. Now some of the trees along 55th Street are in full white flower.
Last weekend, twice I flushed a male cardinal, once by the back gate and once by the back door. While the cardinal is a snowbird, a favorite of Christmas card producers, he’s in nesting mode now, less shy and more protective of his territory.
When I came home the other evening, I stepped off the sidewalk to look at what appeared to be a patch of dead white grass surrounded by healthy green grass. As I was prodding it with my foot and realizing that the clods had been loosened from the earth, something made me look to my left. There, a few feet away under the bushes, the mama rabbit I’d been worried about all the long, cold, snowy winter was peering placidly at me, her nose twitching. Oh, I can’t be 100 percent certain it’s her, but this one had a similar silver coat and a similar alert but unafraid demeanor. I’ve seen two rabbits together, so I am hoping there will be babies this year just like the last couple of years. I miss my two companions of a few summers ago, who sat under my table while I wrote, more like favorite pets than wild animals.
Today dawned sunny and so clear that the deep green of the watered grass (April showers) and the deep blue of the lake are almost painful under the cloudless sky. The anticipation of such agonizing beauty is what keeps me going through March, when even I have had enough of pewter skies and leaden waters.
If I could burst into song, I would.
Afterthought: While I was at Bonjour for little more than one hour, clouds appeared in the west. By the time I got home (where the maintenance people had removed the pool cover and were painting the patio furniture, more indications of spring), clouds were intermittently blocking the sun. From clear to cloudy — or springtime in Chicago.
Fall asleep to wind and rain; wake up to wind and snow
Early spring in Chicago — it makes me want to dance naked and barefoot in the grass.
Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow
I woke up at 4 a.m. to the sight of big snowflakes wafting down gently and thickly. There was little traffic, and the streets were unplowed, so everything was coated in pure white. This is one of the few times that even the city radiates peace and magic.
A movement caught my eye. It was a rabbit, probably the silvery old mama, hopping toward the east fence. It looked like something had startled her, possibly one of the maintenance men coming out to clear the sidewalks. I was glad to see she’d survived the bitter cold and wind of the weekend, and I wonder if I can sneak her some spinach later.
What a perfect scene — a snowscape complete with furry proof that life goes on. It reminded me of home.
My vacation has not been restful or productive. First, there was the Friday trip downtown for lumbar spine x rays. Monday I was able to get a 2 p.m. appointment at a dental practice I’m not familiar with. I couldn’t have an anxiety-free Christmas with the swelling in my gums and pain in my teeth. Fortunately, the wind had died down and the temperature had warmed up — to 10 degrees Fahrenheit. It took about 45 minutes to get to the practice by bus and al (Red Line). The worst part was navigating the untamed, single-lane sidewalks covered with packed snow and treacherous ice.
The staff were very good, from the receptionists and assistants to the dentists (a second came in to look at the x ray). All were so young and attractive that I imagined a hotbed of sex and mentally began writing the nighttime drama. Doctors and hospitals have received their due — why not dentists?
The verdict? A tooth problem or a gum problem — not exactly a surprise (or definitive), but all I cared about was getting it diagnosed (more or less) and treated before too much permanent damage had been done.
After numbing my mouth like it has never been numbed before, not even for my 1998 root canal, the dentist performed scaling in the affected area and finished off by popping in antibiotics. He said his explorer drew no blood — presumably a good sign. If the area hasn’t improved by Christmas, I’m to e-mail him so we can look into a root canal and crown. My dentist had warned me that this was coming sooner or later — coin toss — sooner, apparently.
When I rinsed, I couldn’t feel the water in the left half of my mouth. What a strange sensation, to have no sensation of any kind on one side. The assistant told me not to eat or drink anything until the anesthetic wore off as I might bite my cheek or tongue. I understood this, as I had seen J. bite through his lip while eating a bagel after a dental procedure. He didn’t know it until I pointed out he was bleeding. Profusely.
The assistant also told me, “Don’t smile.” Clearly this wasn’t a matter of health, so I said, “Am I going to scare people?” She answered, “Don’t smile.”
In their bathroom, I saw that my lips were slightly offset, and the right side curled into a snarl while the left remained frozen. I smiled — and the result was worthy of any horror film makeup artist. I looked like a stroke victim — a mad stroke victim. Even without a smile, the effect was impressive. I scared myself.
On the Jackson Park Express bus, I recognized a man I sometimes see on it in the morning, and I’d guess he recognized me. I think he did a double-take.
Perhaps he found my new look scary.
Or dangerous.
There goes the sun
For me summer ends not on Labor Day but with the autumn equinox. I’ve been in a fall mood for the past couple of weeks, though. It’s more than the unusually cool weather and the early sunsets (now occurring shortly after 7:30 p.m.). It’s the retreat of the sun into the southern sky, imperceptible at first, but now impossible to miss. The angled light is somehow softer — still bright, but not as harsh to the eyes.
Today I realized that my current seat in the garden, which just a couple of weeks ago would be flooded with light by 1 p.m. as the sun rose above the trees and their shadows withdrew, is still in the shade; the sun is low enough in the sky to be behind the Flamingo.
Autumn may be one of my favorite seasons (spring is the other), but behind it lies the bitter, dreary Chicago winter, the winter that just a short time ago I longed to be over.
Jolted
When I noticed darkness descending at about 7:30 p.m. on Monday, I didn’t know that I “ain’t seen nothin’ yet.”
Darkness had fallen 12 hours earlier, at 7:30 a.m. As I was getting ready for work, the clouds moved in, the wind picked up, and the downpour began. Fortunately for me, the worst of the wind and water was over by the time I left at 8 a.m.
When I returned in the evening, I thought about relaxing outside for a bit or even going to the stores for the walk. There was some sun, but it wasn’t the gentle, soft summer evening of my dreams. I didn’t feel very good, either, so I stayed in and felt guilty.
Then it was “déjà vu all over again.” I marvel every time at the speed with which a storm can appear to darken the world.
By 8 p.m., the thunder and lightning had begun, the clouds had opened up, and the skies were as dark as though it were hours after sundown, not minutes before. I love storms, so I watched the nearly constant lightning and waited for it to pass in due course.
It didn’t.
As the clouds lit almost like strobes with an occasional streak down to the horizon, I distracted myself by looking up the different types of lightning. I remembered being afraid and my parents talking about “sheet lightning” that wasn’t anything to worry about. I realized how comforting it can be to remain ignorant and to be reassured.
By 9:45 p.m., I had had enough. I tried to read, but was too tired and even too worn out to stay awake. As I dozed, I sensed the storm abating.
The reprieve was brief because at some point near midnight, I perceived flashes. More than that, I heard rain. Rain like I have rarely heard or seen before. It hit the windows in solid sheets. I thought about the young rabbit, which I’d seen in the garden earlier in the evening after a week’s disappearance, and worried that he was not only frightened and soaked, but that he might drown. In a half stupor, I imagined the wall of water coming through the bricks and running down the interior walls.
In east Hyde Park, a lot of tree limbs, some large, some small, were torn off. One tree’s secondary trunk was split off; I’m not sure if that kind of injury leaves it salvageable. My initial reaction to seeing the limbs all over the street was an odd, involuntary one — irrationally I thought with a sickening feeling that vandals were somehow responsible.
The Chicago Tribune reported that conditions sparked more than 9,000 lightning strikes in a four-hour period — not a typical midsummer’s eve storm. Knowing that now, I’m not surprised that this constant onslaught wore on me. But I was less frightened than by the October storm a few years ago in which the wind uprooted thousands of trees while I cowered.
As with many of my fears, nothing came to pass — rain didn’t stream down the walls, and I’ve spotted the young rabbit enough times since Monday to be convinced he didn’t die of fright or drown.
And neither did I.
Storm coming
A thunderstorm blows in from the west.