Monthly Archives: October 2016

Electing to Ignore

 

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It’s Election Day in Juneau. Aki, who didn’t vote, trots down a mountain meadow trail with an “I exercised by right to vote” sticker on her head. It seems to have made her intolerant. When I stop to photograph mushrooms on a tree trunk, she whines. When I try to lead her onto the Treadwell Ditch Trail, she hesitates. When I try to engage her in a discussion about beauty, the little dog looks bored. I ignore her mood and point to a wall of dead-white hemlock snags and say, “Bugs, rain, and wind have stripped these old trees bare and they still have more beauty than the live ones that surround them.” Aki turns away, not prepared to admit that when alive, the trees’ sparse foliage hid their lovely shapes.

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The Harvest

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Aki, her other human, and I are on a gathering trip. We drive out to False Outer Point beach to fill five gallon buckets with rockweed (Bladder Wrack) for covering our garden’s perennials. The little dog chases her Frisbee as her humans fill the buckets. She should be safe as the beach is off the roadway and far from any bears.

1With head down, I grab clumps of the burnt sienna-colored rockweed, shake out any pebbles or sticks, and drop the handfuls into a bucket. Aki interrupts often with demands that I throw her Frisbee. Without looking up I toss it toward the water and return to work. When I take a break to stretch, three bald eagles are flying low over the beach from where, seconds earlier, Aki retrieved her Frisbee. Maybe the big birds dove on a washed-up salmon carcass. Maybe they want to chase the Frisbee. Maybe they want to see how a ten-pound poodle tastes.

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We move quickly to fill the remaining buckets and haul them to the car. In minutes we start phase two—lingonberry picking. Many years before Aki, we lived in a tundra town in Western Alaska. Each autumn, we’d pick gallons of lingonberries for jams, bake goods, liqueur, and only once—catsup. The plants grow here in the rainforest but until this year, we have rarely seen them produce berries. Last week I stumbled on this muskeg meadow with clumps of wine-red berries pulling their diminutive plants into meadow moss. The hard little spheres plunk when they hit the bottom of my berry bucket—a cut down, half-gallon soy sauce container. After an hour of picking the plunking stops as berries already in the bucket cushion the newly harvested ones.

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Picking the low growing berries keeps out noses near the fragrant ground where we can smell the spicy smell of Labrador tea. Biting into a lingonberry releases the same smell, whether harvested on a rainforest bog meadow or on the tundra. None of the rain forest blue berries taste like a tundra berry. But the lingonberries we harvest today deliver the same flavor and smell as those I remember harvesting from a Kuskokwim River bluff after the first frost.

What’s the Deal?

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It’s early morning when we stop to look at Mendenhall Glacier from the North Douglas boat ramp. Pre-dawn sunlight touches the tops of the Mendenhall Towers but not the stream of ice. Across Lynn Canal, the same light hits the Chilkat Mountains with enough strength to wipe out any detail. Usually morning light clarifies rather than obscures landscapes. Has something upset the laws of nature? Aki is no help and the two stellar sea lions practicing synchronized swimming just off shore only growl.

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We press on to the Outer Point Trail and take it through an old growth forest to the beach. Only squirrels break the silence until we walk close enough to the shore to hear the complaints of gulls. It’s low tide so all the birds are on the feed except a monstrous murder of crows roosted in the trees on Shaman Island. They mutter like witnesses at an execution.

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We could walk to the island on a spit only exposed by the lowest tides. Maybe that’s why the crows complain. But that doesn’t explain why the scooters and mallards panic into the air and circle while the gulls feed. I look for the eagle that we passed under to reach the spit and find it gone.

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Beauty’s Last Stand

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As she trots down the trail, Aki’s paws make crisp alder leaves crackle and pop. It’s a happy song that matches her mood. She has already played with several dogs and chased a cheeky squirrel. Surprisingly warm temperatures and sunshine have almost lifted my mood to match her’s. But tranforming leaves add a pinch of sadness to the walk. Beautiful with sunlight-enhanced reds, yellows, and gold, their edges already crumble to a winter brown. They remind me that we must pass through the dull, wet days of late fall before being brightened by winter snow.

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