nichepoetryandprose

poetry and prose about place

Archive for the ‘in the grey woods’ Category

(brackets in the birch grove)

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Last week we went for a walk (more like a struggle) through the birch grove at the base of the grey woods (see the ‘map of the grey woods’ under ‘about’).   To get there, we crossed the fern gully, mostly dry this time of year, and entered a mixed wood of birch, maple, spruce and fir, much younger than the mature spruce in the grey woods. 

These trees grow in very wet conditions, and the forest floor is a hummocky, spongy growth of Sphagnum moss and  fern. 

There is no path through this woodland, so the ‘walk’ was an up-and-down, over-and-under kind of trek.  To stay dry, you must take giant steps from hummock to hummock.  To stay upright, you must check your footing and hang on to the young trees.  With all this concentration on moving forward, I tend to miss some of the interesting detail, so I try to use each ‘balancing moment’ as a time to look around and observe the wild life.

One occupant of the birch grove is the bracket fungus.  This is a type of fungus that grows like shelves on both living and dead trees.  The fungus forms thick flat pads on the tree, usually parallel to the ground.  They remind me of steps, a spiral stair to ascend the tree.

The semi-circular body of the bracket fungus is called a conk.    The conks of the bracket fungus growing in our woods are thick, often oddly shaped, and constructed of various cream, tan and brown coloured layers.  The conks are the outwardly visible, reproductive part of the fungus.  The vegetative portion of the fungus grows as an extensive network of threads within the tree.

 

bracket fungi

~

1.

in this forest

staid

practical

grey

could any form

construe to magic?

~

fairy rings

moths in spectral flight

spider webs, witches brooms

burrows and subterranean

rooms, hollows in wizened

logs, red toadstools

white-spotted, mottled

frogs

~

2.

bracket fungi

steps ascend

a branchless tree

~

© Jane Tims  2011

Written by jane tims

October 28, 2011 at 7:09 am

sounds in the silence #1

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If niche has colour, it also has sound.  Some of those sounds are soothing, the sound of a babbling brook, or the wind in the Red Pine.  Some sounds are alarming, the cry of a child, or the squeal of brakes.  At my office, there are multiple sounds in the background – people talking, computers whirring, copiers copying, printers printing.  When there is a power outage, I am amazed at the silence of the building, and wonder how I can possibly work with all the noise.

When I can’t sleep, I turn to a trick my Mom taught me  – I count the sounds in the sleeping house.  Last week, a welcome sound was added to the usual repertoire, the three part hoot of a Great Horned Owl.  Hoo-Hoo-Hoo   Hoo-o  Hoo-o.   It was a gentle but penetrating sound and it ruled the night.  The owl hooted three times at about five minute intervals and then I fell asleep.

Not long ago I went for a walk in the grey woods and heard a sound I have heard so often before, the grating squeal of two trees rubbing together.  These trees, a Balsam Fir and a Grey Birch, have tried to grow into the same space and now they reproach one another in an endless competition.

the branches of one tree grate against the bark of the other

 

fear of heights

~

as dizzying to look up

in the forest

as down

into the abyss

the trees taper so

~

they lean

birch

against fir

rubbed raw

where branches touch

and reach for one another

~

and sudden, wrenching sounds

a branch swings back or breaks

loosened by a squirrel

or burdened where crows complain

~

or where a warbler scolds

teacher teacher teacher

~

© Jane Tims 1996

Written by jane tims

October 2, 2011 at 9:20 am

settling into unfamiliar

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After three decades of work, I am retiring within the year.  Another milestone.  A new ‘way’ to settle into.

I remember when I made the transition into full-time employment.  It was a huge change for me.

Previously, I had been a student, living at home.  Suddenly, I was away from familiar places, in a new province, on my own.

Fortunately, I had solid back-up… my Mom and Dad were supportive and helped me whenever they could.  I loved my apartment, my new friends, my responsibilities.  Everything was new.  I learned as I went, meeting each new experience as if it was a page being turned in a book.

This transition, my retirement, will be so different.  I should be ahead of the change.  I am settled.  I know my home.  I have my husband to steady me and my son to give me advice!  I have a plan.

But the transition is still scary.  For three decades, my work has structured my life, providing deadlines and places to be, people to see.  I’ll have to establish a new daily routine.  I’ll have to set goals and celebrate milestones.  I’ll have to work a little harder to maintain my social contacts.

It will be like my first walks in the grey woods.  In those days, I didn’t know the paths very well and worried about getting lost (even though I could hear the cars on the main road!).  Sounds were strange, even frightening.  I worried about wild animals.

But gradually I learned the ways of the grey woods.  Every time I walked the paths, they became more familiar, and also more worn and easier to follow.  I learned the sounds to expect and the animals and birds I would encounter.  I learned the pitfalls.  I learned to expect a gem on every walk… a fairy ring of mushrooms, a Pileated Woodpecker hammering at a tree trunk, a chorus of frogs from the ephemeral pools…

 

walk in the grey forest

~

I walk on unknown land

land I have not seen

but dreamed, the wary dream of intruder

where silence is fragile

snapped in two

by leaf fall

~

I step carefully

my disturbance less

than the exhalation of wind

or the mutter of moths

between moribund trees

~

this is ancient land

mossy logs, weary paths

where others may have walked

slanted cathedral light

lichened stones

~

the unknown watches me

crouched in a hollow

flattened to the bole of the oak

betrayed by a ripple on the vernal pool

by the rattle of beech leaf or birch bark paper

it will surely shake free of its leaf garment

rise from the forest floor

to chastise me

desecrator of place

~

even a careful step

is hard on hollow land

~

it will take time

to learn to walk here

to discover game trails in the half-light

to understand words unspoken

to know the dying trees

not as omen

but as part

of the forest

~

© Jane Tims 1998

Written by jane tims

September 29, 2011 at 8:55 am

pitfalls

with 4 comments

If the space you occupy, your niche, has benefits to nourish, lift and sustain you, it also has its pitfalls, its dangers.  Animals know this and their adaptations to their habitat are as much about avoiding danger as they are about obtaining food or shelter.

Think about the Groundhog family in the grey woods behind our house (see post ‘the location of our picnic table‘ August 20,2011, category ‘wild life’).  The Groundhog’s tunnels are designed to provide shelter and food storage, but they are also designed for checking out the enemy and for quick escape.

Like the Groundhog, I try to prepare for the pitfalls.  I have an emergency kit, including water and a flashlight, ready for severe storms, unexpected floods, and power outages.  In spite of this, when our basement was flooded last December, I found I was poorly prepared and all I could do was concentrate on the small steps toward return to normalcy.

The path through the grey woods has its own pitfalls.  When I go for walks I have to beware of fallen trees…

roots ready to grab an ankle…

branches reaching to poke an eye…

and the risks of not looking around, and missing something special and ephemeral…

pitfalls

~

soft places in the earth

hollows in the leaf layer

deadfalls to snag the surest ankle

roots that reach for the body

and chasms to claim it

~

gaps in the greyness of pine

spaces to spill sunlight

admit the riot of leaves

and the keys of the maple

~

holes in the layer of cloud

snags in the curtain

knots in floorboards

eyes in the blackness of night

~

flaws in the fabric

seams to part and peer through

paths we have crossed before

in other ways

~

© Jane Tims 2005

'red mushroom'

Written by jane tims

September 26, 2011 at 8:04 am

autumn along the brook

with 10 comments

Behind our house, in the grey woods, is a narrow little brook.  It is not much to look at but I like its simplicity.  This brook has steep sides (a cross-section like a ‘U’) and grassy banks, and it creates charming little riffles over fallen logs.  Until this moment, I have never realised … we have not given this brook a name!

 

I walked to the brook last Monday evening, to see how high the water was and to look for signs of the changing season. 

Autumn is showing its color everywhere.  Some of the ferns have turned yellow with the first frost…

There are fallen red maple leaves on the trail and in the brook…    

And the berries of Bunchberry (Cornus canadensis L.) are brilliant red…

                                                                                            ‘red berries’                                                                                                               

 

end of summer

~

on the path along the brook

one leaf bleeds into water

in town the walks are stony

chaff of linden, seeds 

dry ditches overflow with flowers

~

I shrug

(no matter

summer is ended)

~

yellow rattle

pods and grasses

rehearse an incantation 

wind sulks in corners of the shed

warmth and sun

paint the orange of pumpkins

knit winter mittens

~

I gather signs of autumn

asters, windfalls, flocks of red wings

frantic in the alders

acorns, hollow galls from oak

~

Orion peeks above the trees

time forgotten, found

and summer with rain never ends

~

I ask for rain

(arms loaded with everlasting)

~

© Jane Tims 2010

'oak leaves and acorns'

Written by jane tims

September 19, 2011 at 7:57 am

a trail through grey woods

with 8 comments

In our grey woods, an old trail follows the top of the slope, between the trees.  It takes constant care to keep it free for walking.  The spruce are old and every winter takes down a new raft of trees.  My husband works at it constantly, cutting a way through the fallen logs and filling the hollows with wood chips.   

When I walk there, I always find something I haven’t noticed before.  Yesterday I made three discoveries:

A maple seedling sprouting in the cut surface of a maple tree felled for firewood…

A pair of bracket fungi on a fallen birch log (notice the shadows of fern leaf on the surface of the fungi)…

 And various other types of fungi, sprung up after the rain…

 

In each case, the discovery was about hope – life from death, new growth from decay.   

The woods have so many lessons to teach… I only need to slow down and look closely to learn.

 

slow walk in the woods

 ~

1.

more to woods

than a path between trees

slow pace

check perspective

~

2.

discover texture on trunk 

scar and indentation

detail in the duff upset

by careless feet

~

note how light scatters

through pollen and powder

now sifts slantwise, shadow

on brackets of fungi

light from lichen

chandeliers

3.

slow beat and breath

match the stealth of forest, realise

branches gather rain

an hour before they weep

~

© Jane Tims 2005

Written by jane tims

September 17, 2011 at 7:02 am

the location of our picnic table

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Back in our grey woods is a place we don’t visit regularly any more.  Our picnic table is there, in a mossy area among mature spruce and fir, at the top of a slope.  It overlooks a wet spot in the woods.  In the spring the wet area becomes an ephemeral stream, and a series of vernal pools among the mosses and ferns.

down-slope of the picnic table is a ferny area with an ephemeral stream... the dark areas in the photo are pools of water

Once, almost 28 years ago, the space was perfect for our new picnic table.  The table was given to my newborn son by his Great-Aunt Jane and we took considerable care in choosing its location. 

our picnic table in the woods

In years past, we took a picnic lunch there regularly.  Sometimes I went there to write.

Today I pass the table when I follow the path through the woods, but I haven’t stopped to eat a picnic there in years.   Another family has taken over, probably of Groundhogs (Marmota monax).  They have built a labyrinth of burrows among the tree roots in the soft soil of the slope.  Where each burrow exits is a mound, the remains of deep-earth excavation.  One of the six burrow openings is larger than the others.  My reading tells me this complex of burrows and exits provides quick escape from predators, a place to store food, and a place to hibernate.

the main entrance to the burrows, under the roots of a fir

Once this place was the ideal location for our new picnic table and our family picnics.  Now the same site is perfect habitat for the Groundhog family.                                                    

 

concerning the location

of our new picnic table

~

share a meal with the unknown

to make it your friend

~

we find a clearing

near the path

where the sun will shine at noon

where we will not have to cut the trees

where the neighbours’ voices

and the passing cars

are quiet 

~

we load the picnic table

into the cart

haul it through the woods

behind the Yamaha

~

we eat peanut butter sandwiches

and applesauce

drink cola

and sunshine

~

we laugh

make friends with the woods

and with each other

~

 

© Jane Tims 1983

Written by jane tims

August 20, 2011 at 7:32 am