[From Goshen News, March 12, 2016]
Early this week we were working on the portion of Pumpkinvine
Trail that overlooks Butts Lake. The lake is really more of a large marshy
pond, with fens of reedy grass throughout. I don’t know whether it actually has
its own water source, or whether it is fed by run-off, particularly in the
spring — in other words, a vernal marsh.
Regardless, it is large enough and holds plenty of water so
that it is very attractive to birds — especially so at this time of year to
ducks, Canada geese, sandhill cranes and redwing blackbirds.
In the lulls between work — filling the saw up with gas,
shedding a coat or a sweatshirt, shifting equipment to the next site — I was
often stopped by the sound of geese or blackbirds or cranes. I stood and
listened and looked.
I’m not a birder, so I don’t know how to properly describe
what I was seeing and hearing, but I do know that I love the keening trill of
the redwing blackbird. There is hardly any sound that says more clearly “warm
weather” to me.
I’m not so fond of goose honking, but the sound of them
flying low overhead, the work of their breath, the wind in their wings is
something that makes me pause. And the clacking croak of the cranes is one of
my favorite sounds in all the natural world. It is a woody, prehistoric call
which carries long distances, and almost invariably makes me stop whatever I’m
doing when I hear it. Then I look around, scanning the sky, especially if the
cry came from far, far above, until I see small black lines waving way
overhead.
Whenever I put the saw down, those sounds came clear and
loud all around, birds coming and going, letting each other know.
While I worked under the loud motor of the saw, cutting
through sassafras and cherry and occasional hawthorn and maple, I thought about
those birds, and the water and the trees that I was working among, and the lay
of the land that shapes all of these things.
The Pumpkinvine railroad bed itself was built by humans, of
course, altering the contour of the land. Raise it here with soil and stone,
lower it there with shovel and machine. It slithers across the land’s natural
rise and fall.
I found myself wondering what Butts Lake was like before the
railroad. Was there more water, was it larger? What about before farming? There
are lots of similar kettle lake remnants all around us, belying our more recent
industrial-agriculture past of tiling and draining, and the much deeper history
of slow glacial retreat thousands of years ago.
I couldn’t help noticing the community of trees that line
the Pumpkinvine, and which spill, from time to time, into larger open woodlots.
As I mentioned, there is lots of sassafras and cherry, the former an especially
good pioneer species, which can be nearly invasive. Some of the cherry are
pretty large. But the really big trees out here are oaks. Mostly northern red
oak and white, I think. I didn’t go tromping onto private property (and I don’t
advise anyone else to, either) for a closer look, but judging by the shape and
structure, the bark patterns and the sheer size of these trees, I’m pretty sure
that’s what they are. There very well may be an occasional bur oak, swamp white
oak, pin oak and even possibly a chinkapin oak. Some of them, most notably the
whites, have been here for at least 100 years, a few pushing 25 to 50 years
beyond that. Beneath them, the leaf litter is thick and the forest floor growth
is thin, inhibited by the heavy summer shade.
Though these linear woodlands contain no trees that could be
considered pre-settlement, and though they occupy disturbed, fringe ground —
attested by the occasional piles of field stone which they’ve grown up around —
nevertheless their ancestry is extremely old and specific to this place.
The same is true of the cranes and the other birds that are
arriving and passing through at this moment.
The same is true, including in a poetic sense, of the Butts
Lake basin, which has held water and sustained plants and animals for who knows
how long.
Though I was working hard, and making an awful racket with
the saw, I came away from my task feeling relaxed. Muscles aching and back
stiff, but satisfied and clear-minded. I looked around at the early-spring
world: the land and its creatures, doing what they need to, what they ought to,
what they know to. It is deeply comforting to be part of this rhythm.
Aaron Sawatsky-Kingsley is Goshen’s urban forester. He can
be reached at aaronkingsley@maplenet. net or at 537-0986.
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