Showing posts with label camouflage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camouflage. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Foxy

Days barely creeping above the forties, my focus has turned from what I can observe from our open-air, front-facing porch, to the feeders out back.
The grassy field across the road, now quiet.
The maple branches, empty of nesters.

I close the door firmly against the chill beneath a heavily clouded, gray sky.
And reluctantly fold the canvas chairs.

Burning Bush, Euonymus alatus

From behind glass, I watch at the edge of the woods,
through bare branches that reveal what summer keeps from us.
The dense scrub of honeysuckle, now a moth-eaten covering of pale green.
The red tinge of Burning Bush, almost past.
All upon a carpet of brown, rolled from one end of the woods to the other.

Fox Sparrow, Passerella iliaca



Beneath the feeders, a Fox Sparrow scratches in deep leaves—the light and shadow on the curled forms, the tones streaking his breast. He is of the colors all around—rufous and gray.



Fox Squirrel, Sciurus niger


So, too, is this very large Fox Squirrel, pausing to peel a hickory nut, his luxurious red tail catching autumn light. His feet and face, the color of fallen leaves. His back, like tree bark.

What nature has revealed in bare branches, she has covered on the ground.

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Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The Child Inside

Tree Frog

The decal on the front door said it clearly.
The child inside waits for Ranger Rick.


Every month, through its glossy pages, to explore the natural world, from a cozy armchair or a corner of her bedroom. The young girl saw many things, and fell in love with the world beyond her door.



Raggedy Ann and Andy, button eyes and hand-stitched faces, watched from the doll bed across the room, their floppy bodies propped against the rough, sand-painted walls. While toads or snails in glass boxes—playmates for rainy days indoors, otherwise alone, looked on.




Perhaps the mailman would also bring her Highlights.
And the hidden pictures within.
Amusement page by page, in the simplest of black line drawings.



Is it any wonder, she still takes long walks, looking?
When there are always hidden treasures to find.


Katydid on Goldenrod

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