Wednesday, December 14, 2011

WHAT IT ALL MEANS - ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE - AND THE PLACES IN NATURE WE HOLD DEAREST


I WATCHED A GENTLEMAN AND HIS SON DUMPING GARBAGE IN THIS BEAUTIFUL PLACE. WHEN I CONFRONTED HIM, HIS RESPONSE, LIKE ALL THE OTHERS I'VE CAUGHT IN THE ACT OF ILLEGAL DUMPING, RESPONDED, "I DIDN'T KNOW I COULDN'T!" I ASKED IF HE OWNED THE PROPERTY. HE DIDN'T. I ASKED IF HE KNEW HOW LONG IT WOULD TAKE A PLASTIC OIL CONTAINER TO DISINTEGRATE INTO THE SOIL. "I DON'T KNOW" HE SAID. I GET THAT A LOT AROUND HERE.

I STOPPED A LOCAL HANDYMAN, DOING THE SAME THING ONE DAY, AFTER WATCHING HIM MAKE REPEATED RUNS INTO THE WOODS, TO DUMP YARD DEBRIS. "THE OWNER SAID I COULD," HE DEFENDED, OF HIS ACTION. I SAID, "DOES THE MAN YOU ARE WORKING FOR OWN THE WOODLAND HERE?" I RESPONDED. "I DON'T KNOW," HE SNARLED. I SAID, "WELL, IF YOU AREN'T SURE ABOUT IT, WHY DON'T YOU ASK SOMEONE, WHETHER IT IS OKAY TO DUMP REFUSE IN THE FOREST?" "MAYBE I WILL," HE ANSWERED. "IN THE MEANTIME," I SAID, "UNTIL YOU FIND OUT IF HE OWNS IT OR NOT, WHY DON'T YOU GO BACK INTO THE WOODS, AND SCOOP UP ALL THE CRAP YOU'VE JUST DUMPED….JUST IN CASE HE DOESN'T OWN IT." I SUPPOSE THIS IS WHEN HE TWIGGED TO THE IDEA, I KNEW MORE ABOUT THIS PROPERTY, "THE BOG," THAN HE DID. SO HE DID MAKE A MINOR CLEAN-UP, AND I MADE A MINOR CALL TO THE BYLAW OFFICE TO REPORT HIM. FEIGNING IGNORANCE IS SOMETHING SPECIAL THESE DAYS, IT REALLY IS, AND THERE ARE ABOUT A DOZEN FOLKS, SOME FROM OTHER NEIGHBORHOODS, CONTINUING TO DUMP WHAT THEY DON'T WANT IN THIS SMALL BUT UNIQUE LITTLE BOGLAND, TUCKED NEATLY INTO THE URBAN ENVIRONS OF GRAVENHURST.

AS I HAVE WRITTEN ABOUT FREQUENTLY IN THESE BLOGS, AND OTHERS, I HAVE A VERY LOW THRESHOLD WHEN IT COMES TO FOLKS CONTAMINATING THIS BEAUTIFUL REGION, WITH A WIDE ARRAY OF GARBAGE AND ALL SORTS OF TOXIC WASTE. I WAS CONVINCED ONE DAY, THAT SOMEONE ON OUR STREET HAD BEEN DUMPING LEFTOVER PAINT INTO THE BOG. I COULDN'T PROVE IT, BUT I WATCHED THE CHAP IN QUESTION, EVERY TIME HE ENTERED THE FOREST PATH, FOR THE SLIGHTEST EVIDENCE HE HAD SOMETHING TO DRAIN INTO THE WATERWAY. SUZANNE WORRIES ABOUT ME CATCHING SOMEONE LIKE THAT, AND GETTING INTO SOME SORT OF SCRAPE. THIS WOULDN'T HAPPEN, BECAUSE EVERY PERSON I'VE CONFRONTED SO FAR, WAS IN ENOUGH CRAP FOR ILLEGAL DUMPING, AND GETTING CAUGHT, THAT THE LAST THING THEY'D WANT, IS AN ASSAULT CHARGE HEAPED ON.

IT'S ONE THING TO FIND CHIP BAGS AND POP CANS LITTERING THE PATHWAY, AND ROADSIDE, BUT QUITE ANOTHER TO FIND A LOAD OF OLD SHINGLES DUMPED INTO A POOL OF WATER NEAR A STORM SEWER OUTLET. I'VE SEEN SOME STRANGE OCCURRENCES HERE, AND EVERY WEEK I FIND SOMETHING TOSSED THAT SHOULD HAVE GONE TO THE DUMPSITE.

As for environmental concerns these days, I've never been more anxious and worried about the governance of my country. I have always been a proud Canadian, and that didn't hinge on whether or not I supported the government in office. The way we have become known to the rest of the world, frankly, makes me feel let down by the people who should be representing us,……leading us, and protecting our integrity in all the international areas we expect as its citizens. I'm seeing a lot of parallels these days, between the government of the day, and the folks who think it's okay to dump crap into the wetlands…..because it's the cheapest, easiest thing to do. They rationalize as well, that they didn't know they were doing anything wrong. They figured, hey, "it's just a lowland, full of water and snakes and stuff." When I see their faces, and let them hang themselves by poorly chosen explanations, I can't help but think they've never been told otherwise…..they have no idea what damage they're causing by their indifference. Apparently, our government acts pretty much the same, and I would never turn to them, to sort out an environmental crisis.

Like this bogland, that not so long was the target of our own town, that planned to sell it for residential lots, it will continue to be in environmental crisis as long as we have the arseholes, who are too cheap and stupid, to dump their refuse at the landfill site. The environment of Canada. Well, we've got a problem. I'm counting on the citizens of this country to force the matter…..and they will in time…..but as it may already be too late to save the planet……I'll just settle, to try and save The Bog.


Monday, December 5, 2011

MUSKOKA AS WALDEN -


SPRING AS WINTER - WHEN WILL THE SNOW COME TO STAY?


It feels today, as I'm lazily strolling through an English moor, as if beneath the hillside perch of an ancient manor house, like Wuthering Heights, or Bracebridge Hall….the gray sky with misty rain, makes this scene hauntingly similar to the countryside of old England…..not Muskoka, which should by now been in the icy grasp of early winter. I should be shivering here, in the open, sneaking my chin down into my upturned collar. Instead it is not even a necessity of apparel, to don cap and sweater, to stand here on the woodland slope, overlooking The Bog. Instead of snow, there is a wafting, eerie mist laying low over the dry cattails, silvering over the field grasses still wavering in the shallow wind of a Muskoka morning.

We have had snow on several occasions this winter season already, but the temperature has not been low enough to maintain it on the ground. Without the cold temperatures, over many days, there is little chance of forming ice down into the soil, which keeps the snow frozen on the ground when it does fall. Today instead of hearing the snow hitting the outstretched evergreen boughs, and settling on the mounds of folded-over lowland grasses, I can hear the myriad tiny cataracts, along the snaking course of the little creeks that cut side to side, and lengthways toward the lake. From even the highest part of the backside, you can not clearly see these crystalline water declines, with the matting of grasses, hilled-up over decades of growth and decline. It is quite a sensation, to stand here and listen to all the subtle but intrusive noise, from these water-courses, causing at times, the feeling the whole landscape is eroding into water, and that the hillside might soon erode away, and fall into the muddy water racing over the declines toward the lakeshore.

Some voyeurs here, might think it uncomfortable to stand out here today. It is not pleasant weather-wise, yet because there is no snow, and temperatures are well above zero, at a wintery time of year, this watcher in the woods, is rather pleased by the spectacle, of nature so barren and beautifully rough hewn. No flowers, no fanning fern leaves, no butterflies or hummingbirds. No leaves on the hardwoods, no mushrooms flourishing at the base of birches. Just a vista of perceived melancholy, which isn't really, but to the casual passerby, it is less captivating than if it had a canopy of December snow. Even now that a heavier rain has begun to fall over this bogland, and our home at Birch Hollow, it is still a most alluring landscape, haunted, spirited, and strikingly poetic to those of passion for the supernatural; the paranormal that seems to abound in the minds of creative thinkers, story writers and spinners. This is a paradise of contradictions, between what is naturally beautiful, and what is appealing to the eye…..so that the sentimental heart won't be disappointed by the blandness beyond.

I will take this remarkable sojourn, in celebration of what it doesn't have, but what it does so poignantly exude, as a topography, in a truly haunted place on earth. I'm helplessly drawn to it as a poet, an artist, and in its bleakness, is a powerful enlightenment to be fulfilled, the questing heart.

One can look at the stark and prone figures of the fallen pines, their branches still reaching upward with regret, and rotting old birches, that cast thin shadows, and feel this is a desolate place. If on the other hand, as the artist, you found these same grotesque shapes, honest portrayals of our natural existence….., might you paint them onto the boards, that may one day hang as a reminder, when this place too, has been paved over and developed, to meet the urban standard. Pity, we don't find this a glorious place now, in its modesty, between autumn and winter.

Friday, November 4, 2011

TIME AND OCCASION FOR THE MIND TO WANDER


It is early November and all is well here at The Bog, my Muskoka "Walden Pond," where the voyeur is heartily entitled, ceaselessly encouraged, to watch the natural transition of the seasons…….and enjoy the peace of mind, abundantly nurtured and encouraged in such inspirational places as this. Gentle, soothing places, where country philosophers aren't scorned or judged, and the path from here to there isn't encumbered by precedent and pre-conceived anything. If I should walk down this short, winding trail, to The Bog this morning, there could be a length of tree, newly fallen, blocking my way. It would be my enterprise to work with the nature around me, and either move the obstacle or hop over it, and think more on the subject, of rolling it to the side. There are no bylaws that will stop this enterprise of nature evolving, or of us passersby, working in unison to free the path of blockages. I adore this pathway, and respectfully submit that nature is entitled to change what it pleases, and when in a mortal day, it decides change is imminent and necessary. We don't need consensus, just not a grand debate on how to regain order amidst chaos. This is one situation of chaos I am respectful of, and in fact, benefit from, as it is evolutionary and splendidly natural. I am always interested in nature's handiwork.

The bogland is heavy with white sparkling frost this morning, although it is going to be a bright and sunny hour to come, without even a whisp of cloud from one horizon to the other. It is late enough this morning that I can hear the pleasant sound of youngsters, running to catch their school bus, at the corner of our lane. It is a nostalgic mix, to hear their voices, and hardy laughter, as this place softens in the increasing light, and the lowland grasses spring back, upon the melting-away of frost from the ground up. The unison of squirrel chatter, the rustling of an old porcupine in the brush pile, and the chirping of birds in the overhead boughs, has a restorative affect on the watcher in the woods; and it is life truly, honestly, celebrated amidst pleasant encumbrance……this change of season…..this length of tree that forces me to adjust my footfall. A change of plan from the normal course. There is birth and then death and a strange dance of life and fate, from one transitory reality to another.

It has been a gentle transition, this fall season, into the more aggressive near-winter days, but after a bright and sunny Thanksgiving, where many people wandered through these same smoky woods, donned in summer attire, the continuing warmer climate, with so much full, invigorating sun, may well be a harbinger of a mild winter yet to come. Of course, the old-timers, judging the frantic collecting of the chipmunks and squirrels, believe this will be a difficult, bitterly cold winter; one for the record books they add!

It is easy to lull into complacency, standing here, overlooking the painted landscape in this bathing of strong morning sun. While I've watched this all before, the tranquil, warm solitude quickly overtaken by the mood swing of December, it is innocent folly, to believe the kind weather will persist; maybe even to Christmas, as it does once every twenty or so years. But I will be contented, regardless, by whatever prevailing climate exists, as it has proven a hundred times over, that inclement weather stirs the artist within. I have benefitted many times, sitting in my office, here at Birch Hollow, looking out on a typical winter-season stormscape, and writing with a boundless vigor; composing long, long into the night, being inspired by the howl of the wind, the rage of snow hitting against the pine forest, the leaning old birches, and this modest wreathed homestead above The Bog…..that has afforded, for all these years, sanctuary from the elements.

As I benefit from this life-full acreage, so close to the urban neighborhoods of our town, and celebrate the seasons of Muskoka, I will return to my abode, soon, and attempt, to the best of my capability, portray the experience of my contemplative sojourn, in the rejuvenating grasp of healing nature,….. and undoubtedly feel, in kindness, I owe this place my keenest attention. When, that is, I've found myself again, sitting at this keyboard, attempting the impossible. To express my most sincere gratitude, for the embrace of nature at Birch Hollow.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Walden The Winter Isn't Far Beyond

WALDEN

THE WINTER ISN'T FAR BEYOND THE FROSTED HORIZON


There is that tell-tale trace of woodsmoke permeating the air this afternoon, that is quite nostalgic, very much the harbinger of the time of year when it is wise to huddle at hearthside. What has been a gentle autumn season, spare the few windstorms to blast-across Birch Hollow, the mild temperatures have kept the leaves from turning, in some cases, and falling onto this forest path that leads through the bog. It is Hallowe-en today, and while there is no sign of ghosts or hobgoblins lurking in the woodland shadows, as of yet, there's a distinct feel of winter quickly approaching……and I fear that much more than wee beasties and scurrilous other Hallowe'en apparitions.

Outside of the trickle of water over the myriad cataracts through this lowland, or the sound of a leaf hitting the ground, it is a wonderfully silent place to ponder the season's transition. I confess to having visited this place less, few times this autumn season, and working harder and longer as home and business economy demand, these days. I most often venture forth, when admittedly I'm fed-up with the rigors, or frustrated with the way time, and its subtle seconds disappear into regret, and rob me of arriving at this portal feeling optimistic…..I can make up the time by keen awareness before the sand disappears down the proverbial hour-glass. I despise having these regrets, and the sense of time loss, that could have been spent enjoying these natural wonders, that surround me in this wild, forgiving, restorative place. Yet strangely, as the resilient soul soon discovers, what might be a mortal loss, is a spiritual gain, and after a few moments of solitude, and general ponder, I will once again find myself thinking the absence was necessary……to make this re-discovery ever-more poignant and meaningful to the unsettled heart.

I will carry away, this rejoice of heart, regeneration of spirit, when soon nightfall prevails itself upon the watcher, and beyond here, will come the determined footsteps of faithful trick or treaters, looking to fill their cloth sacks,…… with the candy handed out, by kindly neighbors and traditionalists, up and down this street. Tonight, they will not be bathed in moonlight, but possibly in the cold rain of inclemency. It won't dampen their resolve to visit as many residences as possible. Just as I trundled, and my young lads ran from house to house as children, with little regard for the prevailing weather. It was the allure of "the treat."

Angst is the curse of the times. The economic troubles around the globe. The assorted stalemates and inconsistencies brewing locally, all ramp up fear of recessionary waves, when reality serves its warning……, of imminent peril ahead; yet we've only just been released by the last undertow of poor economy. It is a wonderful place, this friendly bog, to contemplate one's next move. As the poet and artist revel in this haven of trees and waterfalls, frost-layered cat-tails and leaning old birches, next to venerable old pines, so too can the work weary find solace, in this non-hectic pace, of slow footfall on a well trodden path, from here to there, in the midst of this natural embrace…..I must never distance myself……as it has been salvation so many times in the past.

Now I must don the weight of ponderous chain once more, and try to find the sense of business, to the soft, steady cadence, I can feel against my soul, of sand hitting sand in this hour glass life we try to survive foolishly by efficiency and profit……unlike these leaves that have never worried about getting old and falling…..and haver never once turned a profit, except for the joy they have given me.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

AN AUTUMN DAY IN THE RAIN - MY WALDEN


I'm going to get drenched out here. It is raining hard now, and the overhead canopy of colored maple leaves and birch, and the towering, venerable old pines are sheltering me only modestly. My mother Merle expended many anecdotes and old wives' tales, trying to get me to come in out of the rain. I didn't care if I got wet as a child so why would it bother me at 56 years of age. I'm pretty sure I did get colds and other maladies from being out in adverse weather but what I learned out there vastly outweighed the consequences. Just as it is today, here in late September, 2011, standing on the jut of land overlooking The Bog here at Birch Hollow, our Gravenhurst homestead. It is a grand sight and a splendid sensation to stand here in the mist-veiled Bog, and watch the deer amble along the far ridge…..listen to the tiny cataracts of run-off water in concealed pockets of cattails and matted grasses.

Even though there are motor vehicles rumbling along the roadways, and a hammer resounding close by, it is easy to remove oneself to the tranquility of this wild acreage so close to urbanity. It is an ethereal experience, and it is quite possible to find yourself immersed in the whole history of this oasis of forest, rock and water……as if a thousand years of its history can be spanned by a simple daydream. It is an important place. A healing place. A sojourn so many of us neglect, and bypass daily as if it is nothing more than a backdrop for the place we live. Yet standing here, as I frequently attend, it is obvious that an ignorance to nature is a growing, dangerous failure of modern man. How many times has an ill-informed council thought it prudent to sell-off this bogland, to foster more house and condo building. Not giving much attention, to the fact, this little acreage of wetland, filters a high volume of run-off water from a huge area of our community, before it makes its way down into Muskoka Bay, of the broader Lake Muskoka. I'm reminded daily, of the fight we have had recently, to preserve it, and the clean-ups we must do regularly because of those residents and citizens from beyond the neighborhood, who continue to dump refuse into its precious nooks and crannies.

The meaning of life is here. It is the beating heart, the pulse, the nurturing ground from which we all benefit. When I find someone's cast-offs, dumped here, it is a clear demonstration of our failings in this life. As we put jobs and money above the well being of our environment, with plans for a huge pipeline from Canada to the United States, for example, well, it's what our world, and its excesses, has come to in this new century. We need more, want more, and more than even that! Yet when you pause thoughtfully, for a moment, and think about a place such as this, so beautiful to the eyes, so peaceful to the heart, so invigorating to the soul, how sad it is that we have misinterpreted its subtle, passive, wonderful message. That to maintain our place on this earth, and conserve what does in fact keep us alive, we need a co-operation of the citizens of the world, and restraint on the capitalist rage of fiscal alchemy, trying to turn every resource into a source of revenue. Some things on this earth are not for sale. You'd never know it, by how we live and work.

A little fellow here, and chums, have built a wee fort for themselves, from old wood gathered from some backyard woodpiles. They work away at it for hours on end, and they seem so invigorated, on a Saturday morning, to get over into the woods for another day of building and general adventure sport. It reminds this old-timer of my own series of forts and hideaways from the rest of the world. Although it is kind of misshapen, and covered in tarps to keep it dry inside, I welcome this intrusion on these beautiful woods, because it means our neighborhood youngsters are playing outdoors again. For years here, youngsters stayed on their own property, in their fenced backyards and in those too comfortable, computer equipped recreation rooms, playing video games. It's refreshing and important that they explore these woods, and appreciate the nature that surrounds them. Even in the hinterland of Ontario, it's possible to be disconnected from nature……as many of us live city-type lives, even when we can rightfully claim rural status. While it's true I have made regular trips over to the encampment to clean up the scattered boards with protruding nails, I do enjoy hearing the chatter of contentment, when they are fully engaged in their intricate adventure games.

I have never had any problem sharing these woods. And they have become popular amongst dog walkers, especially, although more and more parents are leading their children by the hand, to look over the wildflowers that grow in pockets along the ridge. It is even more exciting, to hear a parent explaining to their children, about the comings and goings of the resident squirrels, the birds flitting about in the overhead boughs, and about the bugs encountered from flower to flower, and beneath the old rotting logs. If there is a chance of saving this planet, it will be the passions of these children to carry-on.

I was at an outdoor camp with a group of local students, some years back, and watched a young lad, with an accompanying posse, relentlessly attacking a snake they'd found on the path. I was appalled. So was my son. Both of us intervened before it was too late for the snake, and it was the look of contempt on the boys' faces that was most disheartening. They didn't see anything wrong with beating this creature to death. I offered an explanation. They stared at me as if I was from another planet. Here they were, on an outdoor adventure, as part of their schooling, and the teacher hadn't prepared them for what they were about to encounter……and why we should refrain from destroying creatures and habitat because it happens to be in our way.

My sweater is soaked through now, and the rain has become quite heavy in the past few moments. It is so wonderfully refreshing none the less, but I can still hear the echo of my mother's voice, as she used to call me from our Burlington home, when her dream-obsessed child was mucking about the environs of Ramble Creek, on its tumble into the wide expanse of Lake Ontario. Some things never change. I'm glad of this fact, that over a life time I have never once abandoned either dreaming, or my respect for the environment, and its welfare.

My lads feel the same, and I think they'll be only too willing to pass it on to their children one day……who will also build forts, study bugs, listen to the birds and squirrels, and have so many exciting adventures, in wild places like this.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

RETURN TO MY WALDEN


I have been on a writing hiatus over the late spring and summer of this year. Not that I've stopped walking and dawdling through these beautiful woods of the Bog, but rather Suzanne and I have spent some time working on Birch Hollow, the gardens in particular, and sorting our possessions which have loaded the old homestead to the rafters. As long-time antique collectors and dealers, we know what excess is all about. The problem, of course, is that opportunity is both the potential and the disadvantage. Some times what we find out on our adventures, will fit easily into a bag. At other times, what we find of considerable value will be next to impossible, to fit into our vehicle. We never leave Birch Hollow with a determination to only buy small items. We have been known to come back, after a day's travels, with a bedstead, a pine cupboard, several primitive pine chairs, a couple of paintings (some as long as the van), a few folk-art pieces, and of course, some good old books. On other occasions we might arrive home with only several boxes of old paper and documents, that are worth much more than the truck load of antique furniture and art work. It was a summer of this-and-that but we had a good and relaxing time, despite all the work in the raging heat. But now it's time to settle down a wee bit, and pay more attention to the environs here at Birch Hollow, and the grandeur of the old forest trails, and thriving boglands so vigorous in the autumn season. Please join me for some autumn adventures, in this beautiful little pocket of Gravenhurst, Ontario, Canada.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

THE NOISE OF THE URBAN ENVIRONS - AND THE LOST SHRILL OF THE LOON


There are operations near us, here at Birch Hollow, that are intrusive noise makers. There are times when you expect some rogue train to come barreling through the woodlands, coming from this local institution. I try to imagine what could create such a terrible racket, if not a train. I wonder if the management of said institution has any idea what their equipment sounds like, in the neighborhood, and in the vicinity. There have been some earth moving activities, or so it sounds, these past few days, and the first time I heard it, I ran over to The Bog to make sure a bulldozer wasn't plowing through the lowland.

Early this morning, before the neighborhood pre-occupation with leaf blowers, riding mowers, assorted rough-shape lawn mowers and chainsaws, you could hear the gentle tinkling down of run-off water, over two or three crystalline cataracts. The matting of grass and overgrown trees puts these water courses, out of view but what a wonderful sound it is, to hear the life force moving through the landscape, like blood pulsing through our veins. I heard a loon's shrill cry. A small woodpecker was tapping away at an old pine. The sound of the wind, rustling the old field grasses, made it seem pleasantly haunted. But I had only just emerged from the woodlands, when the first lawn mower of the day started up. Then there was the guy who idles his car for a half hour, somewhere on the next street. Even as I sit at my desk, two hours later, there is still a lawnmower in full regalia, close enough to be intrusive. Last night, as I sat down to read Wayland Drew's book, "Brown's Weir," a charming little book, with an east coast patina, that he wrote with his wife and creative partner, Gwen,…. a neighbor, with a postage-stamp lawn, fired-up his riding mower (which sounds like three smaller mowers), and did the rounds before sunset. I had to put the book down. It wasn't right, to have a rattling lawnmower intrude upon an ocean-side paradise, of which Wayland writes about.

When we first arrived on Segwun Boulevard, in the late 1980's, we reacted with great interest, to the sounds of nature. It was a paradise, as far as we were concerned. We were in town but with the Bog, as a green belt, nature was definitely a buffer from the usual urban chaos. It was great. But nothing prepared us for the sounds of explosions, gun-fire, and sundry other strange noises, including screams, that should have drawn interest from everybody on the block. We'd run out of the house, sensing that a neighbor's home had been blown to smithereens, and find nary a puff of smoke or the audience we would have expected under the circumstances. Some clown would shoot at something or other, a half block away, and sometimes we'd be out for a walk at the time. We'd duck in case a bullet was coming over-land. You could never find where the sound was coming from, as if someone was actually shooting from an open window in a house. What we found particularly strange was that nobody seemed to worry about this stuff. An explosion would literally shake the house and its contents, and yet there was no construction going on near us. It used to happen in the early evening. It was unsettling. Now we find ourselves used to these intrusions, and unless we're out of doors at the time, we don't even look to see if there's any carnage to validate that an explosion just occurred.

People here don't give much thought to noise pollution. But in most garden sheds along the street, throughout the neighborhood, there are arsenals of noise intruders from leaf blowers to weed whackers, chainsaws to log splitters, and then there are the wood chippers. Through the day there are construction projects abounding in this bailiwick, all having some intrusive quality, mixed with the power mowers and massive boat engines churning the water of Muskoka Bay. It may seem petty that this is an issue for us purists. But when you realize what sounds these devices are blocking out…..well, that's unfortunate, because they are the sounds of life forces, and they need to be heard. The noise impacts nature generally…..not just the sensitive ears of the mortals.

For a few moments this morning, there were no thunderous dump trunks smashing down the lane. The earth movers were silent, and there was no vehicular traffic. A dog was barking somewhere close and a mother had not yet begun to scream at her youngsters. That would come in the moments before leaving for school. There were no slamming doors, no chainsaws or leaf blowers. No horns, no sirens. And there was a loon. The brush of limbs ruffled by two squirrels. Two venerable old crows cackled above, and I think I heard the sound of a deer brushing through the shrubs on the other side of the Bog. These are the sounds I seek out, and find so restorative. By nine this morning, it was a neighborhood of oppressive urban harmony, as if I was back in my Toronto rooming house, of years ago, listening to buses and feeling the vibration of the nearby subway, hearing the chorus of jackhammers, horns, yelling and yes….explosions of one sort or another. Most people here don't care if they hear the hoot of an owl, the cry of the loon, the tap of the woodpecker, and wouldn't find it interesting at all to listen to these tiny cataracts of water, as they send water down to the lake. What a wonderful din nature provides. Now my neighbor has employed a weed whacker, one of the most annoying species of modern noise making.


Thursday, May 12, 2011

A GENTLE END OF DAY, A GENTLE BEGINNING - IF ONLY WE COULD FIND THE TIME TO ENJOY IT

When you stand on the rise above The Bog, and can spare a few moments to ponder the nature surrounding you, it’s easy to sense what Thoreau felt at his Walden Pond cabin. You can feel momentarily as if you are the only person on earth. You will feel that wondrous sense of entitlement that you have found this place in nature, this moment in time, and that it is all so precious and abundant. You can, at the same time, feel lonely, possibly frightened for a moment, timid, yet strangely invigorated.....keenly alert about what surrounds you. And momentarily the myriad sounds from this wild place will become clear, and that will enable the watcher to determine, without seeing them, which tiny cataract of many, carries the most volume of water over its decline. You will be able to recognize the sound of the breeze rustling through the brown, dry grasses, distinguishing it from the squirrels in a sunset bravado, running across the mounds of earth across the lowland. You might be fortunate enough to hear a deer brushing through the thicket, on the other side of the hollow. And it will all be an enlightening experience. You thought it was just a stop along the way! It is a compelling sensation here, with the gentle spring breeze bringing the fragrances of new growth and old mixed as an elixir.....a tonic to wash away what the winter encrusted upon our souls.
This evening, for me, a regular watcher in the woods, is just as amazing as this scene has so generously prevailed at first light, quenched by the soft fall of a spring rain. Even though the urban neighborhood of this Muskoka town is only a short distance away, from the heart of this greenbelt, at times you can imagine being truly lost in the wilds of the district. You might even miss the sound of car engines and truck traffic on nearby roads that surround this restorative place. So many urbanites have forgotten what Muskoka is all about, these days, and youngsters as well, might only visit here if there were interconnecting bike trails, and daredevil jumps, to ramp up excitement. Yet for the dreamers, amongst us, standing here for even a few minutes, thinking about the meaning of life, and after-life, and enjoying what is uncomplicated and free, this is a spectacular adventure that changes every time I visit.
When I returned to my office this morning, to write this little outdoor piece, I was thoroughly relaxed and contented by all that I had enjoyed of spring re-awakening, down in The Bog. Half way through this editorial piece, the computer.....my old adversary, froze in the middle of a sentence, a word and a thought. How appropriate. I was determined not to let technology ruin the mood. I was to calm to be anything but accommodating to the tabletop beast. Not being computer savvy, more than just being able to sit and tap away at this keyboard, I had to rustle up my wizard son to set me free again. Five minutes after leaving me to my own devices, the electronic marvel shut down again but I was able to trouble-shoot free this time. I credit my time, this morning, over at The Bog, for giving me the “serenity now” to finish the short tome, without even once feeling the need to clobber this computer for its quirks. I have a few of my own, so we are of the same ilk to some degree.
I will sign off this morning, to allow the technologist to work his magic at upgrades. It appears our computer is having a bad day. If I could fit it under my arm.....it’s an old desk model, maybe a stint looking out over the bog might do us both good. I’m told by the experts it’s time for a lap-top. I still have a preference for my own Smith-Corona typewriter.....and by golly, it was portable and didn’t need a battery.
I will retreat to the moor later this morning, with my friend Bosko, and we shall resume our bid to remove ourselves, once again, from urban and modern trappings, to feel for a few moments, what it was like when Thoreau opened his cabin door onto Walden Pond, for a wee escape from his writing. While he may have suffered the need for more ink, for his pen, he didn’t experience the let-down of a computer malfunction. That is a conundrum he is fortunate to have missed.

Monday, May 2, 2011

WANDERING AIMLESSLY A PASSION OF MINE

Since my day to day writing-job was abandoned, when I took up antique hunting over journalism, back in 1990, I’ve rarely had writing jags as prolific and successful, as I’ve experienced, quite joyfully, for the past six months. I love to write. Sometimes I do get anchored down by certain subject material, and this year it was local politics. I’ve never been a political animal, as a hobbyist, and have shied away from spending too much time analyzing it.....even when I was working as an editor for the local press......I’d make no apology for fobbing off a political story to a reporter interested in local government. I used to fall asleep at council meetings.....as did four or five other district councillors bored to slumber by the proceedings.
. I’m particularly strict about what makes it to print, these days, and what is destroyed before public consumption. I’ve always worked in this fashion....much like an artist with sketches and paint boards that don’t measure up, and are destroyed to avoid any future appearance in the public domain. Starting about six years ago now, I began seeking out all my early notes and essays, and commenced shredding like a man possessed. I couldn’t even stand to read opening paragraphs. I knew what they were, and my only question was why I had hung onto them for so long. I don’t want my family to have to make these decisions later on, about what can be re-published, and what should make the waste bin. So I have cleansed the trial and error copy and although I had regrets, over the reduction generally, it was a good feeling to cut the rope, on what I have long perceived, to be a cumbersome anchor, encrusted in the barnacles of writing misadventure. Now I’m far more precise and with the computer, versus the old Underwood typewriter, I can zap what I don’t want, without crumbling one page of actual printed copy.
Today it’s so nice to wander out here through The Bog.....my English moor, and think about some new writing projects I want to pursue this spring and summer. I’ve joined a new publication, The Arrow, up in Almaguin, and I’m re-introducing some feature columns on artist Tom Thomson.....and his mysterious death on Algonquin’s Canoe Lake, in July 1917. I like starting new, even on semi-retired research projects, such as the Thomson story, which I began writing initially for the Muskoka Sun, back in the mid-1990's. It’s a great story with all kinds of strange twists. But it’s Thomson’s fabulous art, more than anything else, that compels me to stick with the story-line. Out here this morning, I can see a number of natural scenes Thomson might have found worthy of closer study, possibly a sketch or two. What a privilege it is then, to be so pleasantly immersed in the middle of remarkable nature.
Over the past six months I involved myself with political debate and local government-themed editorials, on my blog-sites, and it is such a departure for me to do so, that Suzanne felt compelled to remind me of the more inspiring things in life, I’ve been blowing off.......in order to write about tax increases, social neglect, over-governance, under governance, and general malaise at town hall here in Gravenhurst. Not that I don’t believe my work over the past six months, was worthwhile, just that Suzanne knows that if I drop my landscape writing for more than a couple of weeks at a time, there’s an obsessive-compulsive problem brewing. I need to wander these well trodden paths, and stand here looking out over all the fresh growth, the new and emerging life forms, that call this splendid little haven, their home. For the first few serious outings, through the wetland, I will still grumble about this or that, an objection from some newspaper account I’ve read, or kick at some fallen birch, as if it represents all the political problems we face in this municipality. You should see what I kick when disenchanted about provincial and federal politics. I have to remind myself constantly that what I’m kicking is some

critter’s habitat. So I refrain.
I’m not interested in politics. I’m interested in good governance. It’s in darn short supply.
I will stand, overlooking The Bog this morning, and arrive at a more contented state of mind, feeling markedly more poetic than activist. It is election day in Canada. I hope everyone votes. This beautiful place will stay on my mind throughout the day now, and when I sit down at this keyboard, I will feel empowered, not burdened-down by things I can’t change or improve upon. This nature, I study, is perfect as it is. The freedom I have to explore it, is a freedom known to the spirit, as the greatest escape of all. A burden cast off,.... a heaven-on-earth to explore.

Monday, April 18, 2011






APRIL AND WINTER STROLLING ARM IN ARM - THE BOGLANDS TRANSFORMED

Today the wind still bellows through the evergreens and half-fallen old birches, standing guard on the far embankment. The storm front that pushed over Muskoka, on the weekend, brought down a large number of old and venerable trees in this boglands. There are lots of fallen limbs and birch chunks smashed to the ground. The windsong of the air rushing through the pine-tops was as eerie and mournful as I’ve ever heard from our abutting woodlands. The roar, at times, seemed as if belonging to a train on some invisible track, headed right for this modest abode at Birch Hollow.
Late on Sunday evening, the snow squalls were intense, and by morning, we had a white canopy with considerable ice from a freezing rain, mixed in with the diverse weather that crashed the spring calm of the week before. Looking out over the bog this morning, one might think it was the first snow of the late fall season.....appearing more like the enhancements of November than of mid-April. The wind is still rigorous this morning, and has a cold stab to it, that makes me turn away during the most powerful gusts, cutting through and above this lowland. It is a dangerous walk as many puddles have frozen over, and the ice is coated by a thin layer of fresh snow. The gusting wind is still breaking off small limbs, and tumbling them down onto the white forest floor, and I’ve only just now, had to “dodge and dart” shattered branches, spraying from above, in order to avoid getting hit square on the head. I really shouldn’t be in here now, with so many old and leaning trees. But the view, out over the frozen bog, is so wonderfully bright and inspiring. The artist should be here to capture this frozen landscape.....the new growth breaking through the earth, last week, now covered in ice and snow.
This is a haunted and amazing place and it is worth the risk now, to stand here, looking out over the lowland, and wondering how artist Tom Thomson might have captured the scene on his paint boards.
It is legendary. Historic. A painting of nature, we are entitled to wander through at our leisure.

Friday, March 25, 2011

A WORLDLY PLACE, AND SANCTUARY AMONGST THE BIRCHES

There’s a great deal of contentment, these days, escaping this short distance into the Muskoka woodlands, to quietly, gently, subtly contemplate the good graces of the natural environs. When the news this month, of this new century, is so damning, dangerous and seemingly hopeless, you look out upon this changing landscape, watching the wildlife dart in and out of the scene, and in only minutes, one can safely side-step without prejudice, some of the more pressing issues of the day. And that day so far, has been involving, and evolving everything from major earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanoes, radiation contamination, environmental destruction to war in North Africa. To ardent news watchers like me, it may seem the news of “everyday” consequence...... and they would only be wrong by degrees. While it is a regular occurrence to have these natural disasters, being a partner to a major radiation event makes this anything but a routine period of time. We couldn’t survive on this planet too long, having nuclear disasters, as they have experienced most recently in Japan, occurring around the world as frequently as earthquakes and pesky volcanoes rumble terra firma.
It is hard, obviously under the horrific circumstances of multiple disasters, to blame Japan for this major environmental calamity. They didn’t have the opportunity of deferring an earthquake or the resulting tsunami. They did have an opportunity to make sure their nuclear power plant could withstand a heavy blow from the earth and the sea, and still contain and protect what is held within. What we find today is that building a nuclear site, in an earthquake prone area, that also has a history of receiving tsunamis as a result, is an unsound, dangerous, reckless way of conducting business. And that’s what it is. Business. As the recent oil-well disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, was a man-made disaster, so to was this ill-fated power plant the result of man trying to best nature on the cheap! Poisoning a nation that has been devastated, first by earthquake, then by tsunami......, now by radioactive contamination over this picturesque island. Now to spread across the sea to other nations, contaminating all the natural wonders along the way.
As pretty a picture as this is today, looking out over this beautiful Muskoka lowland, with all its promise for spring, I can’t help thinking about this place being compromised as well, by all the contaminates mankind likes to play with in the pursuit of profit building.
When our neighborhood was recently faced with a town hall initiative, to sell-off this filtering bog, situated above an already stressed Muskoka Bay, Lake Muskoka, we couldn’t believe that reasonably intelligent councillors could even think about cutting down, infilling, levelling and building over this important urban wetland; that by the way handles a huge amount of drainage water from a large section of our community. Their nifty idea was to sell it off, make some needed money, to help finance a new town hall for themselves. Well, thank goodness there were enough like-minded folks, ready to take up the challenge, to preserve this tiny but significant wetland. But it still shocks me that we had to fight tooth and nail to conserve it, over the greedy needs of the council of the day. The fact we were able to thwart the sell-off, for yet another subdivision, gave a lot of other folks, in similar situations, the incentive to take their own environmental concerns to town hall. We had calls from other areas of the province, praising our defense of The Bog. I wish it could be protected forever but I know some rogue council, in the future, will force a re-visitation to the issue of diminished budget, and surplus property, and potentially put the neighborhood back into action, to defend its environmental honor. When I think about the folks in Japan, who really didn’t like the geographical situation of their neighborhood power plant, were they told.....it’s perfectly safe so don’t worry? Of course they were! That’s the deferral game. You must be crazy to have reservations about our good intentions. The reason this bogland has been preserved, is due entirely to a revolt by the citizenry.....not because council suddenly developed a conscience. What they developed was a keen sense of the opposition’s vigor to protect a wetland, at all cost, and that could have meant some national photo ops that were coming up next. I’m not sure how much fuss was created, when that Japanese neighborhood found out a nuclear plant was being built next door, but I’m sure the relationship has seen its ups and downs over the decades. It’s hard to imagine how terrible it must be now, to think of the “what ifs,” as a countryside is in ruins and contamination is stretching further each day. What if it hadn’t been built in the path of a tsunami, or at least it had enough safety precautions built in, to survive a natural disaster? As usual the citizenry of this fine country will be punished for the actions of government and business interests.
I can lean here, against this accommodating old birch, and quite enjoy the natural radiation of this distant early season sun, feeling some minor satisfaction that we have wildlife and a wild landscape, where houses were planned by speculators looking to make an extra buck. But I will continue to feel uneasy about the future, and whether or not some financially desperate council, one day, will set its focus on this small acreage in an urban neighborhood. I can’t help pondering whether this site will feel the rain of radioactivity one day too, as a foul wind blows from west to east. And whether it confounds the experts or not, shall this cleansing lowland be forced to contend with that same manmade disaster half a world away? However tiny the sprinkling of contamination, will it herald a clearer realization, we are killing ourselves for profit. When is it time to stop the madness, and clean up the carnage we have created......in support of the generations yet to come? It does take some of my satisfaction away, knowing full well, we can’t protect forever, what is obviously so vulnerable, from the growing contamination of mankind by its insatiable appetite, obsession for profit. I must enjoy this sanctuary while it lasts, as such.
I can imagine, as an often repeating nightmare scenario, the distant thunder of chainsaws getting closer and closer, and my chain around this venerable old pine, getting tighter and tighter.


Thursday, March 10, 2011


SPRING, OF COURSE IT’S RAPPING AT THE DOOR

Today is heavily overcast and despite the snowfall of the past two days, it is most likely going to rain before the noon hour......turning the lane into a quagmire of slush. I think we may have rain for several more days, as well, before the arrival of the March Break......when my teacher-partner, Suzanne, will sit with me here, at Birch Hollow, also admiring the view over The Bog.
It seemed as if spring would arrive early this year, from the substantial melt over a week ago, but the temperatures dropped for most of the week, and that kept the daily reduction of snow to what the sun rays alone could inspire. Still, it has been an easy winter here in Muskoka, with a lot of wonderful sunlight. I’ve worked at this desk many days, over the past two months, and had my hands soothed by the sunlight coming through this glass pane. The old cats have enjoyed sitting up on the window sill, and watching our resident squirrels stealing from the bird feeder. I have found it all very cheerful, when for most winters in the past, January and February have been bitter cold and gloomy. Not this year. I don’t know if it inspires me to write more, or not, but I definitely feel less tired and reluctant. As a life-time writer, I do have moments when I would rather do anything else than play at this keyboard. But I have work to do, and I will force myself to settle and eventually compose. If I was to ever allow my disinterest to prevail, I would be finished as a writer. I have long stuck to the policy that regardless of the emotion, the mood of the room, disposition of the other inmates here at Birch Hollow, or the intrusions encountered by door rap and phone ring, to never cease a writing project as a result. It might mean I’m a tad terse or negative in a story-line. Of this I offer an apology to readers.
Today might be gloomy by appearance but wondrous by association, with the glimpse of spring’s proximity glowing with possibility on the horizon. It will be a good day at the keyboard. Of that I guarantee. See some of my other current blog-sites, being more regularly updated.

Monday, February 28, 2011

A SOJOURN OVERDUE - THE END OF FEBRUARY, SPRING BECKONING

As a public school kid, I had a crush every spring. As a high school student, the same. As a unattached writer for quite a few years, I had a crush from early March to whenever the apple of my eye let me know there was no way in hell. Yet even with love lost, I’ve long been respectful of this time of the year, and always feel invigorated to explore and trundle about, shaking away the crust of relative hibernation. What better than getting poetic and walking through these freshly decorated trees above the Bog. There’s something important to learn here.....and I’m still questing. If there is a meaning of life, I know it is to be found somewhere in this precious woodland......in the atmosphere above this gently, subtly haunted place on earth.
Although possibly, a too early postmortem of the past winter season, I must admit an eagerness to see green earth again, and watch the tightly wound coils of maturing ferns that fill in this beautiful Muskoka lowland. I do recall my mother Merle, insisting that I “not wish away time,” as it was “too precious for a child to waste.” Merle was a lover of life without question. It became particularly acute in her 40's, when a doctor suggested her health was seriously failing. She worked hard, over many years, to lower her blood pressure, lose a massive amount of weight, and both see and enjoy life in so many different ways. Merle survived well into her eighties and to her final moment, had a confident smile that she had lived up to what she preached. I often think about this when I’m wandering through our neighborhood bogland, stopping to listen to the chickadees and woodpeckers at work and passtime, and waxing poetic about life and afterlife. Indeed, I don’t want to miss anything here......it’s all so important to the sense of well being.
Most folks pass this Bog by, every day, without the slightest notice. Even when they walk here to get their mail from the neighborhood drop-off, they would sooner read their mail on the return trip, than glance into the snow-laden gallery, which provides such a vision of solitude and enchantment. These folks have given up on their inner child......the child that would run free in this same woodland if given a chance.....celebrating liberation from the overseer.
There is the unmistakable aura of spring, manifesting in its peculiar splendor, just beyond the vision that greets us this morning. It is so spectacular for the soul, to be exposed to this grand potential for renewed life......as the power of regeneration vibrates beneath our feet.....on this final day of February 2011. I am not so foolish as to wish this day away. It is as precious as all the others. Symbolic in that it concludes the most dangerous months of the winter season, by calendar at least. From early forecasts, it might also appear that midnight will see March enter as a lamb.....and depart, well, as a raging lion. I shall celebrate whatever nature brings, as it is the architect of the future. Through blizzard and calm, windstorm, and rain, I will venture here to find Muskoka as spirited and effervescent as always. And when those tight rings of rich, green ferns, begin to unfurl into the patches of spring sunlight, forgive me the indulgence of feeling restored and enthralled, about all the possibilities for new adventure.
There is still a gentle flurry of snow settling upon the bogland at this time of writing. It is such a picturesque scene, and I’m sure Merle would have put Mozart, on her old record player, to enhance the vision. I don’t have a record player today but I can still hear Mozart. I can still see the old girl sitting on her chair by the window, looking out at the treetops catching the heavy new snow. And sense her contentment that “life is good.”
I wonder how many people in Muskoka, feel the same about the seasons as I do. If this neighborhood is any example, then I fear the answer is “not enough.”
To truly protect the environment, in this region in the future, as development stresses continues to increase, its defenders must be aware of this disconnect of the general population......who have become desensitized to the hinterland that houses them.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

THE MORNING ESCAPE INTO THE WORLD OF THE BOG

After listening to the news this morning, and wondering aloud to my wife, Suzanne, if we were approaching another world war, with all the profound change in the Middle East, and then learning of the terrible earthquake in New Zealand, I feel it as almost an act of cowardice to amble down this frozen path, of The Bog, toward my Muskoka Walden.
Even as a die-hard news seeker, there are times when it all seems too much, and in this new age of citizen reporting, putting us in the news only minutes after a serious event, we are placed much closer to actuality than ever before. It’s a lot harder for any one to say “I didn’t hear about it,” these days. Whether you listen to the news regularly or not, with the “breaking news” interventions throughout the day, even if all you want to hear is music, there’s simply no avoiding the truth of the hour, realities of the day, and implications for every day after that......all thanks to an expanding media force, in the hands of citizens around the world......certainly a most remarkable change from even five years ago. Some would say it facilitated all of the Middle East region rebellions ongoing. From New Zealand this morning, only hours after the powerful earthquake, the world knows about the extent of the catastrophe......not because of the work submitted by reporters and television crews but by images captured by ordinary folks with camera phones etc., who want the global community to know about the tragic turn of events. Hopefully the increased exposure will draw aid faster.
It is an incredible late winter morning here, with the bright sunlight dazzling off the snowscape, and the long shadows reaching out over the bog, from the naked hardwood stands on the embankment. There are woodpeckers whacking old pine trees in quest of breakfast-bugs, and the chickadees are chirping away at a nearby birdfeeder. The squirrels are making rather merry in the tree tops, and venerable old crows call out loudly over the still sleepy neighborhood. All is well in this woodland oasis. Looking out over this winter scene in transition, watching daily, as I have been,...... the sun becoming stronger. Melt water running beneath the canopy, now heavier and capable of eroding the ice from the underside, as the warmer temperatures by afternoon, will melt away the top layer of ice. There is a lot going on here at this moment. It is the decline of one season, the age I feel in my old bones, and the gradual emergence of a spring atmosphere. The temperature will rise well above freezing, for the next several days, and much of this canopy will be fractured and concentrated over the unfrozen ground.
Standing out here, admiring the natural grandeur afforded these Muskoka woodlands, I’m still immersed by worry, about the course of world events, and how the ill effects will reverberate here.....as they will without question, throughout this more intertwined global economy. There are people in this community with family and friends in New Zealand, who will be devastated at this moment, worrying about their well being. Yes, there is a feeling of guilt standing here now, benefitting from this peace on earth, in this gentle, calming sanctuary. Yet there’s something important within this tranquil place, some wonderful aura that attaches to your soul, and makes you appreciate the spirit within, this land, your heart, to make peace with whatever difficulties arise. The recognition that the spirit is strong and dynamic to the changes we face.....if we allow it to rise to the occasion. How many of the self-professed weak, have risen to huge accomplishment, when faced with enormous challenges. I have great faith in the human spirit to prevail.....despite what evilness it encounters.
I wish, at times, during these woodland hikes, I had the privilege of chatty company. What a pleasure it would be to have Thoreau to opine with, while staring out over this beautiful snow-laden landscape. How marvelous, to have Robert Frost for a journey through these snowy woods. Imagine the insight, having writers like Washington Irving, and Charles Dickens kicking along this same trail, discussing affections for life as art; their thoughts about the role of tragedy and epic change upon the international landscape. While I might prefer the old Bards to help me understand, and prevail upon my own writing with insight and illumination, I will gladly seek the word of all those sage folks, who have wisdom-enhanced outlooks upon the future.....and who have dealt with adversity....and been inspired by its essence of success. When they look out at this future change of season, they see and respect the inherent power of change, and react accordingly to circumstance. If there is a flood as a direct result of this change of season, they will know how to react in advance. Their wisdom has allowed for a pro-active way of living, expecting that at any time, adversity might bump into them again, as a matter of rightful, natural course......not as a perceived inconvenience, but as reality collides perpetually with vulnerable mortality. That’s life for you!
It is a refreshing start to the day, to wander these narrow, frozen paths, to nowhere in particular. It is as haunted as it is enchanting, as truthful as it is mysterious, and yet the truth is clear......that the bitter cold of winter is in decline, and the days will continue to get warmer....... and the melt water will increase the stress, and rage beyond our view, along all these little creeks and waterfalls, criss-crossing the uneven lowland. It is the kind of scene Tom Thomson might have found interesting for an art panel. The kind of poetic place on earth, that might have inspired E.J. Pratt, G.D. Roberts or Bliss Carmen, no strangers to Muskoka. Maybe I will be the only serious observer of this place today. Maybe even tomorrow, except for the few youngsters who venture into the bog as a minor adventure, on the way home from school. I can tell they’ve been here because of the cast-off apples and bananas, half-eaten sandwiches and cracker crumbs dropped into the old snow. I’m just glad they have taken a few minutes at least, to visit this wondrous place......where crows and blue jays call out through the day, hawks sweep overhead, deer and moose amble into the lowland on warm and sunny afternoons. It is a place of spirituality.....a place to re-awaken to the power of nature.....a place for non-poets to be poetic when no one is looking.....a place to hear the voices in the wind, a place to sing what you wish to sing......a place to be contented and at peace. Away from the news for awhile, but never distant from an actuality....we simply can not escape. Reality can not be out-run. Even here. Although, admittedly, I have often tried.

Monday, February 14, 2011

A WEEK OF MELT AND FREEZE, AND BACK AGAIN - BUT A WINK OF SPRING

For the past day the snow has been melting quickly. I always worry about sustaining melts at this time of the year. Although we don’t have a huge amount of snow, it’s enough to create that seasonal malady.....the flood watch. We have had very few instances of high water at Birch Hollow, over the past twenty-two years but there have been nervous times when our neighbors’ problems became our own. We have been unceremoniously awarded all the run-off water they don’t want hanging around their properties. From roof and basements, the run-off water, some of it by actual pump, has been directed toward our modest homestead. I have walked down our backyard path only to be met by shin-high water, building up against the side of our house. Seeing as I have thousands of old books in my archives, any moisture contamination could cost me dearly. So exiting the run-off away from the building is imperative. Acting fast is necessary to avoid the water rising above the concrete block foundation. We are built on a cement pad so we don’t have a basement, as such, to worry about. Once the water passes up over the blocks however, seepage is more than likely to occur.
The problem has been, in the past, that the water starts building up in the hours between midnight and first light. Anticipating the problem, I have to dig trenches in the snow, well in advance, to exit it down the lane, instead of allowing it to pool behind the house; and then draining through our family room. I’ve asked the neighbors if it would be possible to re-direct their respective run-off during the spring melt. They comply for awhile and then, without warning, the hose is re-located, and the tell-tale gurgling tells me I’ve got to start trenching immediately.
I love the early spring. The first warm days when you can hear, outside of the run-off from my neighbors’ pumps, the collapsing layers of shattered crystal-ice. Over in the Bog, you can hear the near-rapids in the little creeks, and what were, days earlier, only fairy-falls, have become rushing torrents, washing through the lowland. You can’t deny the feeling of being gradually unfettered, as if the winter has set the soul free at last. It is the 14th of February, Valentines Day, and yes I forgot about it.....but was reminded just how forgetful I was becoming. Suzanne doesn’t seem upset when I forget about these special occasions.....as long as, before the day is out, I redeem myself as a good husband. We will, as usual, spend the evening here, at Birch Hollow, thanking God we have this wonderful homestead in the Muskoka hinterland......and two young lads, who feel exactly the same.....and cherish the region as their grandparents, and great grandparents before them.
The cats are particularly animated this morning, as an old grey squirrel has been sitting in the bird feeder, nibbling on the leftover seeds of the winter feed. They’re not too sure what to make of the squirrel we call Seymour. They prefer watching the chickadees that come in the morning and then in the early afternoon. Seymour doesn’t really care that he’s being watched. He’s got more important things on the go. The cats eventually turn their backs on the squirrel-kind, and get back to licking paws and scratching.
It hasn’t been a long or particularly cold winter. Certainly not as snow-laden as we have become used to in Muskoka, and the sunshine has been incredible......at a time when we expect it to be overcast and snowy most of the time. It is a great attribute of winter to be sunny, especially for all those with light deprivation issues. Yet no matter how moderate the winter, how much warmer it was than the year before, how little snow, or fewer blizzards, by the middle of February, after a November start at inclement weather, we’re all anxious about the arrival of spring. There is a joyous wonderment when you step out into the warmer air, and hear the constant drip of melt water from the declining snow-cover. It’s easy to wax poetic, about the rejuvenation of our gardens, the lilacs and the raspberry canes outside my office window.
Writing has always been inspired-onward by the arrival of spring. When I was a kid, growing up in Burlington, and then residing in Bracebridge, the spring was the time to be creative.....to get out and explore....seek adventures.....get so many soakers as to drive mom nuts! I loved channeling water as a kid, and all the experience I got in my old neighborhoods, is becoming of considerable use today.
I could sit here all day and write, and never feel constrained or without subject matter. Winter is a great time to muster here, with this excellent view down onto The Bog, and writing, while a witness to countless wind and snowstorms, is like chatting with a friend. It is all so beautiful and compelling.
For more than two decades, the lilacs and raspberry canes in the front garden, have been my harbingers of the seasons. There are still clumps of snow caught up in the lilac arches, and many of the raspberry canes are held down by the snow of the past week. Soon they will rise again and the sun will engage that spectacular restoration of life juices, feeding the buds of May. These plants were rescued from the old family cottage on Lake Rosseau, at Windermere, that was torn down some years back. It had been my wife’s family homestead built by Sam Stripp. We spent the late summer and fall living at the cottage prior to moving to Gravenhurst that cold October. When we moved here, in 1989, I insisted we bring along as many lilacs and raspberry canes as we could, without destroying the integrity of the old cottage property. I brought a few more back, after Suzanne’s father sold the cottage, and later the family home, in the Village of Windermere, following his death. Our property here at Birch Hollow is full of memories, transplanted as live plants on all sides of the house. When I watch out at these garden residents, I think back everso gently, and peacefully, to those other times in our lives, which we cherish in memory.....and watch in actuality, still thriving from the first roots of homestead heritage. It is without question, a poetic comfort to us oldtimers, and we trust our boys, one day, will maintain this plant heritage as well.....and to share with their children the stories of the good old days.
I have been sitting here for the past hour without too much to show for it. My tea is now cold and the cats have moved from the window sill to the pad on the wicker chair at my side. It’s time to take Bosko out for a run......and to listen for a while longer, the joy of the spring melt.....that has come a little early this year.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

THE HIATUS FROM POLITICS - THE PEACE OF THE HINTERLAND

Back in the mid-1990's, while researching the mystery of Tom Thomson’s death, on Algonquin Park’s Canoe Lake (in July 1917), our whole family turned onto camping and canoeing, in one of the finest parks in Canada. We had a hell of a run, and between Tea Lake and Rock Lake we spent many fascinating vacations hiking trails (Booth) and paddling many different waterways. I always seemed to feel better overall, as soon as we hit Dorset on the trip to the park. Touching the water at Canoe Lake was magnificently spirited, and everything that came after was a joy on earth. What oppressed us at home, was dissolved out here. The first couple of miles paddling the canoe, evaporated all the politics and economics of the homefront. We may still have been poor either way but out in that canoe, on a beautiful lake, just took the stresses and cast them aside for those wonder-filled weeks.
If I have any regret today, with our boys now fully occupied in their own music business, here in Gravenhurst, it’s the fact there’s not much time to travel to the park ,let alone canoe through the summer. It’s their busy time in Muskoka, and in the antique trade, of which we have been longstanding members, our best hunting-gathering time is also from April to Thanksgiving. We host four or so major sales during this time, plus on-line business, and it definitely makes it harder to get back to back days anymore, to even think about an overnight camping excursion. I know the boys miss it. I’m hoping they will do the same with their youngsters one day, because it is a life-enhancing experience.
I have always operated my life on a “rewards” basis. I will work hard and long, and get the job done, but at the conclusion, I must be able to reward myself with something. It hasn’t mattered what my occupation, or the task at hand but having something to look forward to, while working away at something stressful, gives me an objective worth achieving. When I played sports, particularly hockey, I looked forward to the game, then hated it after the opening face-off. I was the goalie and it was a solitary, lonely, high stress position. I not only was a clock-watcher but while tending the net, I made oh so many plans for activities immediately following. The better I felt about post game fun, the better saves I made. It was the same with writing, way back in the early years with various Muskoka media. A lot of the stories I had to work on, were painfully boring....such as business features and personal interest stories.....some that put me to sleep during the interview. Not to be disrespectful but I just couldn’t get interested in a guy who made a wooden bowl.....something that has been done for centuries without the need for news coverage. When I’d get to the task of writing up the story, gads, if I didn’t have a strong plan for reward, after the fact, the story-line would suck big time. Then I’d have a guy with a wooden bowl and my publisher (usually his friend) angry that there was no enthusiasm in the piece. I hate that kind of work but it made up more than half of the projects we were asked to write-up. Even sitting through a municipal council meeting, meant I’d have to plan a really nice reward for myself afterwards, because these events were traditionally void of anything interesting.....unless a councillor fell off his or her chair in slumber.
I don’t take on projects these days that will necessitate any added reward at the end of the project. Everything is self-assigned, and in reality, writing jags now are the reward for work on something else......like mowing the lawn, cleaning the gutters, wangling around the crawl space or shovelling the driveway. It is a joy and a wonderful release, like getting into a canoe, when I sit down here to compose something or other. Of course wandering over into the woodlands is usually a mainstay reward these days as well. When I get frustrated with the news of the day, politics, economics and phone interruptions I can’t stand, a walk with old Bosko through the woods, here at Birch Hollow, is just perfect for mellowing-out. While I wish I was a little closer to those beautiful Algonquin lakes, and could easily slip the bow of the canoe into the sparkling water, standing here on the hillside, above the bog, is still a soothing respite.
Today is one of those beautiful winter days in Muskoka, when the deep cold and clear sky is the perfect relief for what might ail the voyeur. Listening to the sounds of the still-trickling waterfalls, at junctions of intersecting creeks below, and looking out over the snow-laden cat-tails, frosted grasses and leaning birches, makes this for me, a heaven on earth. A writer’s paradise where there are no deadlines and no word counts. No boundaries that tell me how I must present a story, such as one on a bowl maker, or how I should write-up a local political story that annoys me. What goes on in my mind during those spirited vigils, is evidence of a joy for creativity, I still possess, afterall these years calloused by the profession. It is writing for blogs like this one, that provides my daily treat.....an honest relief from the etching of urban, business, economic and political existence. Even writing about my Walden here, at Birch Hollow, is like the first full paddle of a canoe out onto a mirroring lake, where the traverse has never been mapped, and the destination, never fully determined. I might just paddle off into the eventual sunset, and that would be pretty darn rewarding.
My reward now is to sit here for awhile longer, watching the wee birds at the feeder outside my office window. What a friendly encounter between food-provider, and welcome guests.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

THIS EXCITEMENT IS THE ADVENTURE OF OBSERVATION

My contemporaries wonder aloud, about my reluctance to travel abroad today, and seek out the evasive holy grail of adventure. It’s always been a sliding-scale kind of thing, dependant entirely on my mates at the time, and the quantity of booze consumed in the planning stage. I used to plan a lot but there were also many aborted missions due to exhausted funds. It also, can be said with some relevance that I used to imbibe more than I should have, and many of those adventures, of once, had alcohol as the fear-reducer. I got to a point however, when the odysseys were more self destructive than life enhancing. I had my share of party exploits to boast....the “no one ever did that before,” kind of accomplishments, some that I apparently still hold the record for.....and continue to be the subject of whispers at events that I’m still barred from attending thirty years later. I was a struggling writer who felt so much more creative with a belly full of ale. A lot of writers have fallen prey, to this over-reliance, on demon rum. I still have some of the manuscripts from those early days, and they’ll always be keepsake reminders of wasted days and nights.
Occasionally a lady friend, from those days, will ask me if I still swing on chandeliers for a laugh, take bites out of decorative candles, or eat fresh flowers from ornamental vases I come upon......while hammered. I know I did that once, at a wedding, and the bride wasn’t impressed. I wasn’t either, the next morning, as I spit-out large portions of colorful petals, when I brushed my teeth. Apparently I had also consumed a quantity of after shave lotion, on a dare, and that made my morning breath quite fragrant......and flower-full.
My grown boys know I was a wee bit of a rascal, in my bachelor days but I haven’t told them anything truly embarrassing, like the trysts with my girlfriend’s mates at these same party fiascos. I was a three-slap a party recipient from the girls, a two punch minimum from respective boyfriends.
Heck, one of my all time coups, was getting to drink with legendary Toronto Sun columnist Paul Rimstead, at a benefit hockey game back in the early 1980's. He tried my hockey sweater on and got trapped in it, and it took a couple of strapping lads to free him. Now that was worth drinking about. Getting trapped. And then freed. There was a lot of symbolism for a writer to consume. Rimmer was my role model. He died as a result of his excesses.
I got married and Suzanne sobered me up. My wife became my manager. I finally became a writer, who could actually make sense out of the copy, he wrote the night before and the week before that!
I kind of chuckle to myself, when one of my associates today, questions my gentler way of living, almost as if the fire within had been extinguished. In reality, those crazy days of bewildering excesses, were banked in memory. Whenever I feel the need for something out of the ordinary, I can recall, with striking clarity, those forays in social extravagance. I still wince a little, thinking back on events that changed my history forever. I suppose the most surprising aspect of it all, is that I survived. I’m very grateful for this but Suzanne deserves the credit. Being locked outside in October, and sleeping on the picnic table, gave me some food for thought, about how bad our marriage could get...... before I smartened up. I like to think this has happened, although she feels compelled, from time to time, to remind me of some ridiculous misadventures from my past. Ones that I’m supposed to remember, simply to scare me straight evermore.
Today it’s all the faded pages of a contented historian’s biography. Mixed into it all, was a union with many wonderful characters, who, in their own way, enhanced my days with a lifetime worth of reminiscences. But I look out, this afternoon, onto this snow-sculpted winterscape, and find joy that so many more birds are using the feeder; feeling such striking fulfillment as a writer over these many decades. Possibly it is true that I lack the courage for some new adventures, at least the ones I used to adore, when there was a wee bit of pay cheque left after the rent was paid. And I had time to make last call. Still, I wouldn’t sacrifice this now, for anything. The dog laying over the tops of my feet, the cat purring on the windowsill, the neighboring kids wrestling on their front lawn, and this invigorating scene of January sun, sparkling off the frozen landscape to the treed horizon. While I’m sure it is of great concern to my former friends that I’ve apparently lost my desire to conquer the world, I’ve found quite the opposite, that engages my sense of adventure. . My adventure is this amazing place, observing the seasons, the storms and bluster of autumn, the grace of late spring nights, when sounds of new life fill the air. I can sit here for hours and never be bored. Or feel uninspired. Very seldom, except for today’s recollections, would I even contemplate switching back to my life then. Especially at the expense of sacrificing this joy as a writer, to watch the amazing transitions of nature, light and shadow, wildlife and wildflowers. Of this, I must concede, passion has replaced the passion to binge. Observation has infilled where liquor once inspired. I will learn so much more from this study of nature, at Birch Hollow, than I ever gained in the social network climb, that always ended with a hell of a fall and a tell-tale hangover.
It is a brilliant sun that reflects in diamond light off the new snow from the night before. The sky is a beckoning, heavenly blue, imposing upon the watcher, to take flight in spirit, to adventures unknown.....but worth investing imagination. I might finish this day having composed no more than four or five pages of editorial copy. There have been a few days this winter, when I’d wake myself up, chin against chest, having slumbered off, rather peacefully, not having typed anymore than the day’s journal heading. It’s that peace and solitude, this generous inspiration afforded by The Bog, and its woodlands, which has become my temptress adventure.....and if it ends in my passionate daydream alone, I resign only to write a wee bit more the next day as compensation.
The dog has just this moment, let me know it’s time to go out for an afternoon constitutional. The cat requires a pat on the head, to demonstrate equal affections, and the copy I’ve been working on for the past hour, needs its exclamation! I shall retire here, for a lengthy walk in the woods with an old friend. Come on Bosko!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

A PREAMBLE:
The short story was written for my Muskoka as Walden site. It was inspired by this winter’s rather gentle sojourn, here at Birch Hollow, a period set aside to write and occasionally shovel snow. Published below is the result of this even mix of home maintenance and creativity explored.
I have remained steadfastly loyal to non-fiction. Since giving up the idea of being a novelist early in my writing career, I have been pre-occupied with nature, history, actuality, politics and story-telling in general. I was employed for many of those years as a reporter / editor and columnist, a position that should, of course, be as far from fiction interests as possible. Of course I’ve known and still do, a few scribes who come dangerously close to merging the two.
In my senior years, I have admittedly changed direction a tad. There are many ideas and personal ambitions in writing that frankly defy my old standards. Over the past ten years I’ve been dabbling in non-fiction, writing short stories that allow me liberties of opinion, and emotion non-fiction can not. At least the non-fiction I compose. While I’m still a long way from considering myself a non-fiction writer, or soon-to-be novelist, I have aspirations to continue this foray in creative writing. It’s how I began in University, having numerous Canadian poets as writing mentors, which did have an impact. I’ve never ceased writing poetry just not for publication. With my deep respect for legendary writers like Washington Irving and Charles Dickens in particular, I recognize that my influences will undoubtedly be the skeleton beneath the story-line. Truly, there are aspirations I have, as a writer that can not be handled by non-fiction alone. Even if my fiction attempts are confined to short stories, there is a newfound adventure in all this.....beginning with the reality that no fiction I could ever produce, will be totally divorced from my passion for story telling, and my insistence on incorporating as much truthfulness and actuality as I insist of my non-fiction authordom.
The short piece of fiction published below, is a reflection of my childhood infatuation with nature, and a wee lass named Angela. It is based on a memory of this period of my young life but it is embellished of course. In part it was inspired by my immersion in this beautiful region on earth, Muskoka, and this homestead, we call Birch Hollow, across from today’s snow-laden lowland known as “The Bog.” As a child however, growing up in Southern Ontario, my first paradise was a city greenbelt that abutted our apartment complex, on a street known as Harris Crescent. I spent every moment I could down along Ramble Creek, on its meandering run toward Lake Ontario, and it was my “sailing away” dream, to one day build a raft to make it all the way, out of this creek, across the lake, and out to the sea. I was always adventure-minded. Much less today.
The short story was composed while looking out my office window, and my passion for this hinterland, here in Gravenhurst, is the thread running through the piece, and all of them past, and I dare say, the common silken line in all of those creative jags planned for the future. When my wife and sons read the rough draft of this short story, they agreed, it was biographical with a trace of fiction. Truthfully, I nearly drowned four times in my life but only two are identified in this story.
I could never have composed this piece, or much of anything else, in a city environs, or working away from this place that has been so nurturing and fulfilling to my enterprise. While it is not a blog by definition, it is very much an honest re-telling of values, interests, devotions, love, sadness and an unyielding respect for the cycle of life; the existence of guardian angels, and the power of nature to evoke change, command attention, renew, restore, destroy and then grow anew. It is the awesome power of nature that draws me to this magnetic place, where I can most clearly watch the seasons in the rolling year, and never become bored or complacent with my surroundings.
I hope you will find this lengthy tome of some interest. If nothing else, it is a shred of a biography I’ve been meaning to write for decades. When I was writing it, I did, at my own convenience and inspiration, substitute feelings I have for people around me today, to seed into the characters of the story. It is a patchwork, composite piece that truly spans a half century. Some of my critics and friends argue that I’ve always been a strange confluence between fiction and non-fiction, a dreamer and soothsayer but by honest approach to every story, definitely not a liar!
Enjoy!



MY DROWNING IN RAMBLE CREEK

I was guilty of fatal neglect on the water. Of fishing in a calm little bay, at the bend in the river, forgetting how the silent currents can sneak up on a dreamer adrift. Re-coiling up from the murky bottom, striking sharply against the keel, as a viper first traps, then lulls its kill to an obedient surrender. A serpent’s lash, lifting up the canoe and then tugging it gently, at first, pulling more aggressively once beyond the shaded inlet, where I had first dropped a fishing line.
Without knowing it, I emerged into the final straightaway of the winding river, just above the small cataract and rapids, that I’d portaged around earlier that morning. What had been a distant, dull roar of river, washing down a small rocky decline of Muskoka landscape, was becoming a distinct rolling thunder that I couldn’t yet see, but felt as a tremor vibrating through the watercourse.
By time I was able to react, I couldn’t back-paddle fast or hard enough to change course, and decided the only escape, would be to angle toward the narrow ribbon of black water, over the brink, by paddling hard instead, in order to maintain the direction of my choice. My hope was to at least keep the canoe upright and miss the many smooth rocks I could see just inches above the surface.
The initial steep tip and first hard lurch to the right, should have been the violent end of the adventure but by some crazy fortune, the current spit me out into a shallow eddy to my right. There was no place to exit with the canoe, through the rugged canyon, so I thought that if I made it half way down the first level of white water, I could navigate the last thirty or forty feet of turbulence. There were a lot of precedents banging about in my head, each insisting to command my actions. I resisted them all.
I tried to ease the canoe from the calm eddy, slowly into the black water of the lower rapids. The current, after only two feet of immersion, jerked the bow down hard, and then abruptly right, then left, smashing against a submerged rock. I was thrown out before the canoe had actually capsized. A numbing series of heavy thumps against rock and submerged tree trunk, made the traverse a precarious spectacle of mortal frailty. I had no hand, at this point, in survival. There was no way of gaining control in that heavy wash down into the bay.
When I did have a final, weak thought process to exercise, I knew it was futile to panic. I needed to hold onto something. Find a rock or submerged branch to grab. Tumbling helplessly, head over heals down into the icy white water, I made a desperate attempt to set my feet onto the bottom to halt the fall. The top half of my body was always further downstream than my legs. The relentless pressure and pull of the current made anchoring impossible. If I was sucked down the rest of the rapids, I knew the turbulence at the base would have an undertow. A matter of only metres from the strongest current of the falls, my left foot somehow locked into a crevice between slippery boulders, at just the right angle and body spin, to correct my position, and eventually be able to stand up.
My hands were badly cut from the underwater rocks, and the foot-hold was precarious because of the slime on top of each. I felt as if my position could be compromised at any moment. The waist-high water was viciously determined to knock me down but as it was a matter of life and death, only winning this contest was good enough to preserve life. I could look out and see my life-jacket caught in the whirlpool below, with my tackle box and sealed lunch container bobbing in the ring of froth. The canoe had already hit shore half submerged. As a writer, I couldn’t have asked for a more poignant final chapter, even before I’d penned out the first line of the preface. It appeared someone else would be writing my biography. Better stated, my obituary!
I don’t know how long I stood in that frigid, beating current. All of a sudden, and not seeing where it came from, I was hit on the shoulder by a thrown rope, tossed out to me by some nearby campers, and then ungracefully tugged, almost a dead weight, up onto the sun drenched rocks. It was during that onshore rescue celebration, and wonderful hot coffee, my rescuers provided, that I mindfully sketched chapter one. A story set more than fifty years ago, two hundred miles from this terrible misadventure. I’d survived a half century between near death incidents. I began the rough sketch for a retrospective called “The Lucky Bastard I’ve Been For All These Years.” It seemed a good launching point in my life, to assess guardian angels. Why was I spared? A second time?
As I sat drying out on those hot rocks that day, I thought about angels and what role they’ve played in my life. These folks, behind me, my rescuers, didn’t think of themselves as angels. Just run of the mill weekend campers who happened to be on the campsite for my unceremonious shooting of the rapids. I’m the only one who knew just how close the end was, as I’d experienced it first as a school-kid, about a half century ago, in a creek so much smaller than the Muskoka River.
I sat with my hands back on the rock, stretching to look up into the bluest sky I’d ever seen. Being spared from death can cause this tingling of the senses, and sudden unyielding devotion to reclamation. Those sparkling diamond lights, sun rays filtering down through the thick cover of summer leaves, reminded of similar afternoons reclining along the embankment of Ramble Creek, in my old hometown. Almost a lifetime ago, I thought. It seems more of a short story, vaguely familiar, than a fact of my own life. It was then that I could see her outstretched hand, as if heaven-sent, to remind me of life unfulfilled. The life I was to continue, as a debt of moral gratitude to Angela, a childhood chum, who couldn’t make the journey with me.
There was always a constant pulsing gurgle of full-life, down deep in the subtle confluence of golden currents that smoothed in silken streams, over the flat bridging rocks of our Ramble Creek. It was mesmerizing, watching the twisting funnel of undertow, sucking away leaves from the eddy, along the shore, quickly pulling them below the surface. Propelling them invisibly, far out into Lake Ontario. We were all warned about the undertow that swam like a diving serpent, when the water flow in the spring heightened, and each drain in several abutting neighborhoods discharged raging white-water, into the limestone basin of the creek. We were all told about boys and girls who had drowned down there in the past, but none of us believed stories our worried mothers spun.
It was calming to sit along the grassy embankment and watch the waver of hardwood leaves make sunlight dance, off the deep black pools that held suckers in the spring, long silver minnows by June. For most of the year, this place was calm and gentle. An afternoon and weekend sojourn, for all us kids, who hung out along its banks, and fished joyfully for smelt and gathered up huge black tadpoles for jar-aquariums. We built roofless forts and climbed trees that were covered by thick vines of wild grapes. It was Kipling’s jungle adventure at our beck and call. We arrived home with sloshing soakers. Covered in mud and blood from well deserved injuries. Of course my mother had a lot to worry about. There lots of ways a child could die down in that ravine.
The kids of Harris Crescent played in the ravine for lack of a nearby park. Most days the shallow creek was gentle, only of consequence to those who couldn’t balance on the limestone slabs that allowed us to cross from side to side, up to the Lakeshore Avenue bridge. This is where the water was deeper and closer to Lake Ontario, and there was a smell associated with this locale, that stuck on our clothes like a huge stain. It wouldn’t take Merle more than a few seconds to identify, “You’ve been down to the lake, haven’t you?”
Angela lived halfway between my jumping-off point, above the ravine, just below the apartment complex where we lived, in that late, strange,1950's Peyton Place of fear and trembling. My parents lamenting at cocktail parties, and on euchre nights, about big bombs landing on our heads. Cold War threats and bomb shelter digs, accenting the gardens and shrubberies of neighborhood backyards. Everybody had a plan. Larders full to overflowing with enough food to survive an apparent eternity. A week anyway.
There were lots of homegrown ideas, how to escape and survive an atomic bomb. I was in love with Angela, and at times it sure felt as if I’d been whacked by one of those pulverizing Russian bombs. She glowed with radiation, in my eyes. I adored her from afar. That was our relationship. My vigils in the woods of Ramble Creek, watching out over her back swing-set, for when on these bright afternoons, she would take flight as is, of course, an angel’s heavenly privilege.
Frankly Angela scared the hell out of me. I was sure I’d piss my pants if she ever stopped to talk. When we’d pass each other in the hall, it was as if I might vaporize into a fine dust, to be then met by the janitor’s large sweeping brush. I only knew her from school and admittedly held a damning schoolboy crush, the kind that makes the love-sick seek out any number of coincidental, opportunistic meetings in the class and beyond. I’d followed her home one particular afternoon, in the beginning of our non-relationship, after she parted company with girlfriends, and found that her house was a familiar ticky-tacky bungalow that backed onto the creek. It was on the opposite side from where I lived but it was only a five minute walk down the narrow creekside path.
In retrospect, I suppose I was her childhood stalker. It was a compelling situation that left me worse-off day by day. I had no idea what it was, about this classmate that held my heart suspended, sending tremors of withdrawal through my body, when at the opening bell, she didn’t grace the desk next to mine. When she did arrive I couldn’t take my eyes off of her, and nothing was normal any more. I recall my mother being blown-away because I put on clean shirts and pants without command, and brushed my teeth twice before trundling out of the apartment each morning. I asked if I could have a comb? That’s right, Angela gave me reason to own a comb. My first. It was when I asked Merle if she would buy me a package of Valentines that year, she knew it was my first dance with the potentially catastrophic, “femme fatale.” She agreed with resignation, her wee Teddy was growing up. There were very few, if any, of my contemporaries, male or female in Mrs. Carter’s class, that year of atom’s threat, who weren’t penning piles of punched-out Valentines for their favorite mates, and promising others.
Slipping a romantic card into a paper pouch, hung off the bottom rung of the chalkboard, wasn’t all that profound, as most students got a full compliment. Except those poor gangly souls who mired in their own awkwardness, by choice or not, and always got lesser hits from Cupid’s bow. The same who were picked last in team selection, and who walked home alone every night wishing it wasn’t so. I was amongst this special group but we forgave ourselves with cards between us.
Angela’s poise put her above my outstretched arms. My attention would be undesired. All of a sudden I wished to grab up the card I put into her pouch, and run from the classroom all the way home. Of course you’ve felt this way. Embarrassed. Humiliated. Smaller than small!
Our teacher would hand the stuffed pouches desk by desk, and there would be a huge hush except for the sniffler and sneezer, amongst the anxious gathering. On that day, with what appeared a better haul than years previous, I violently ripped open the package just to find one Valentine in particular. I would be able to recognize it by the silken touch and a heavenly perfume all angels are naturally anointed. It wasn’t there. Angela had snubbed me. I was devastated and continued to look through the cards, on the floor, on my lap, searching for any evidence the card had simply been lost by misadventure, the result of nervous fingers. I had been stood-up. The one Valentine I’d expected was not delivered. There’s nothing worse, for the hopelessly lost in love, than to be denied a Valentine. I turned to look at Angela with visible disappointment, just shy of tearful complexion, and watched her fingering the now ridiculously large Valentine I’d saved especially for her. Not once did she look at me. For the remaining few minutes of the day, she never once glanced to her right, even when the teacher put a homework note on the chalk board beside me. I’d made a giant fumble of protocol, giving a girl who didn’t like me, such an elaborate card. Oh the humanity. I wanted to climb into one of those bomb shelters.
I couldn’t get out of that school fast enough. Instead of hustling down the Lakeshore road, as was my habit, I took the rear exit strategy, and disappeared like a phantom down the shady paths and back-streets, away from any one who would think of asking about my haul of Valentines. After a brief hiatus at home, feeling of lesser substance than the old budgie, “Tinker Bell,” flitting in her cage, I headed down to the only healing place I knew. The ravine. The narrow hollow of land, where this tranquilizing little creek washed away trepidation, and frustration, silently in its powerful, cleansing undertow. A water flow that beckoned to current me through the golden beams of sun, the silver crust of February ice along the shore, out to the expanse of lake where my dream-boat bobbed lazily in the diamond lights, all the way toward the open sea.
I sat for a long while that afternoon, in that Valentine thaw of premature spring, thinking about the fool I had become, the result of a simple infatuation I couldn’t possibly understand. It was beautiful here, alone, with thoughts of exploration whipping about the brain yet lost in the sickness of heart all foolish boys nearly drown in, at one time or another, before becoming cynical and disinterested in self-defense as a strategy of survival. It wasn’t long before I began rambling along the path, and it was no coincidence I wound up in a snow-laden thicket, offering a narrow view of Angela’s backyard. I saw footprints in a well trodden path across the property, leading down to the creek-side, and it was no problem at all, for me to imagine the golden-haired lass standing there, with her red knit hat, and long pink scarf, hanging loosely off her shoulders. It was her angelic aura, the blue twinkling eyes and beautiful lips that brought the watcher in the woods to his knees. How could she have been so cruel? Not getting a Valentine from Angela could ruin my life.
Angela never appeared that afternoon, and she was away for most of the week after, which made me wonder if my card had caused some sort of wild embarrassment she couldn’t face in our classroom’s side by side situation. Maybe she was going to transfer to another class or change schools, all because of one big ugly Valentine, sent to a love interest who couldn’t stand me.
She did return to class eventually but I couldn’t face the humiliation of any more rejection than already delivered that lowly winter month. I refused to look at her. At least when she was looking my way. I stole a lot of glances, when she wasn’t watching the board over my shoulder. I still half expected that she’d flip me a Valentine, from inside her desk, even though the occasion for giving such was long since over. I didn’t want to admit I was less love-struck but I was slowly recovering, and with the exception of sundry half-hearted daydreams, Angela wasn’t all-consuming any longer. Of course I was delusional. I had a profound, enduring love for her I couldn’t shake, no matter how many times she ignored that stupid, painted on smile over the exhausting winter of my discontent.
We had an early spring that year. The snow was being washed away by torrential rain and it was obvious winter’s back was broken. Amongst the neighborhood lads, we were hell bent on adventure seeking wherever it presented. My mates Ray and Bobby decided to help free Ramble Creek of the last bits of ice-cover that cloudless, warm Sunday morning in March. It was dare on dare all that morning. Ray and Bob jumped over every inch of that last black ice of the season, sending shards into the air, shattering down the snowbank. We had broken hockey sticks from the arena, to use as poker poles, to pound many new fractures into the ice.
There was one section of still thick ice, over a dark pool we knew, by experience, was deeper than we were tall. Merle had warned me to stay away from that part of the creek because it’s where the dreaded undertow dwelled. Hers was just a voice I’d learned to ignore. After both mates had failed to crack the surface, I gave it a whirl, jumping from a rock on the bank, dropping several feet onto its shimmering surface. Nothing could break that ice, except nature herself. Just as we were planning our next assault, my position changed in so many ways.
As I stood on the ice over that encased water, without warning it suddenly cracked through, and in a weird slow motion, I slipped down in stages through the jagged ice pushing up. In seconds I was up to my chest in frigid, fast moving water, trying to pull me under the ice. Without us realizing it, the heavy rain had brought about one of those seasonal peaks my mother warned about. We had only witnessed flooding conditions several times before, usually in the late spring and autumn. My snowsuit filled with water and it was impossible to lift myself out of the creek without the help of my mates. My legs were numb in seconds, and despite Ray and Bobby’s repeated efforts to pull me up, the breaking ice and my water-logged weight made it an impossible rescue. They decided to run for help, or out of fear, I don’t remember. But the last I saw of my chums, was the gyrating silhouette of their snow-suits, as they scampered up the hillside of Harris Crescent.
I had begun to panic and was losing a lot of energy trying to pull myself up onto the remaining ice sheet. Although I could stand on the bottom, because I couldn’t feel my feet due to the cold, I knew it was just a matter of time, before I lost balance on the slippery rocks on the bottom. Once that happened there would be nothing to stop me from being sucked under the ice by the strong current. It was clear to me though, in that jumble of thoughts and frigid reality that I couldn’t get out of the water without help. Unless the boys had gone to get Merle, I was going to have a short life with a tragic ending. There was going to be an empty desk at Lakeshore Public School.
I have long felt, over these many decades since, that I was very close to succumbing, and simply letting go of the ice crust, allowing the undertow to take me out to the lake. Everything was numb. Even my brain. I was certainly muddled and when I heard a voice initially, it sounded far away and fading, as my glazed-over eyes stared up toward our apartment, thinking it might be the voice of my mother yelling, “hold on Teddy.” It was someone calling “Teddy,” repeatedly, and I felt a tug on the hood of my snowsuit. “Teddy, Teddy, look at me,” was the directive, in a muffled voice coming from somewhere behind me. I couldn’t turn to see who it was, for fear of losing my balance, and that being the ultimate end of a failed struggle. I felt a severe pulling of my hood, and I began to panic about this new force on a conflicted, injured body. “Teddy, Teddy, it’s me....give me your hand.....now Ted, give me your hand.” I tried to raise my arm but it felt like rubber. I soon made a connection, of someone or something at my back, and then another sudden, heavy pull up on the shoulder slack of my jacket. I was being twisted up out of the water by forces unknown, and I remember feeling a sudden panic that my feet were leaving the bottom of Ramble Creek, and being helpless at that point to do anything more than follow the commands from persons unknown..
Up over the jagged ice that ripped the entire back out of my snowsuit, and roughly scraped about two feet of my skin, waist to shoulder, I recall seeing a revolving vision of water, trees and blue sky, as I felt myself being fully raised, and spun around from the rushing water, back first, onto the snow embankment, as two forms wavered above. I couldn’t recognize their faces. It took awhile before I could distinguish voices. “Are you all right, are you,” came an agitated voice. The light above was making their faces black. If I was dead, I was with company. The dead could talk. Maybe I’d even survived. Alive? Was I alive or not, because I didn’t know much about death or its expectations on the newly deceased.
When my muddle began to clear, and true fear and trembling overtook me, it was obvious I had been rescued from certain death. I was too cold to be grateful, and too scared that one of those faces might have belonged to my mother Merle. When I focused on the forms huddled over me, at first I didn’t recognize either person. It wasn’t until one of the two fell to their knees beside my head that I clearly saw the face of an angel. Her shimmering hair falling out from a red knit cap, and her heavenly blue eyes and enchanting smile. “Teddy, are you okay?” I couldn’t answer at that moment. I nodded. She seemed satisfied with my short but none the less clear response.
I was okay. I took inventory of my mortal parts, and they were all intact. I had been saved. Spared over, to live another day. To adventure forth to far horizons and challenge the world yet again. I sat up, let my rescuers haul me to my feet, and let the gallons of ice water drain from my snowsuit. I wasn’t out of danger just yet however, as I heard the familiar blood curdling scream from my mother, just then bouncing down over the snowy hill in that paternal instinct of rage and “damnation of Faust,” as she used to call it, that always ended with a rough snag onto the top corner of my ear, for an unceremonious, stumbling and crying trip home.
In our years of friendship, after this near fatal childhood misadventure, Angela never mentioned my Valentine’s Card that February 14th, or why she hadn’t stuffed one into my envelope. Angela had given me something even more remarkable, you see, when she and her brother hauled me from that watery grave of Ramble Creek.....of which I appeared to belong as human toll of the serpent undertow. And all that sunny, wonderful spring, she would invite me to cross the flat stones over the shallow, golden currents, softly gurgling away in such a poetic place on earth, at such a memorable time of life. To join her on the swing set in the backyard, where we shared our innocent fantasies about sailing away, one day soon, to traverse that dazzling jeweled lake in summer light.
I can still remember the soft, warm touch of her hand in mine, as we stood on the grassy shore of Ramble Creek, and the warm kiss she gave me on the cheek, just before I let go of her delicate fingers, to cross over on the limestone bridge still wet with my footprints. I couldn’t stop looking back at Angela, standing there alone in the late afternoon light, stumbling as I did, on the exposed roots and strewn rocks someone had pulled from the water. It was an experience, with Angela, I enjoyed many times that spring, swinging on that old creaking metal-works, talking about nothing in particular, especially about Valentines or the lack thereof. I do reminisce even a half century later, about the last day I knew Angela, holding her tiny porcelain hand, and looking at her tear-streaked face, pale in the low light of an old day. I didn’t know why she was crying. I didn’t ask. I have always felt dreadful that I didn’t understand our final moment, and why she didn’t want to let go of my hand. I realize now, she had fallen into her own deep pool with perilous undertow of which there was no chance for rescue.
I never saw Angela again.
We were told some weeks later, Angela had passed away peacefully in hospital, after a short illness. I heard my mother talking with a neighbor, that afternoon, and they used the word “leukemia,” that had apparently resulted in some local child’s death. That same night my mother had to come down the path with a flashlight, tripping along the perilously narrow creek-bank, to bring me home from my vigil, across from Angela’s house, watching pathetically for a light to appear in her bedroom window. I didn’t know what leukemia was, and I didn’t understand death. I understood about survival and that is what Angela had imprinted upon me. I’d somehow, by some physical weakness, let her get pulled under by the current here, and I was ashamed of letting go....., of letting her slip under the ice, away from me forever. It was just as the undertow had pulled those leaves from the shore, and pushed them far out into the lake where I could no longer see them. I knew she was out there, somewhere.
It was and remains the mystery of Ramble Creek. The undertow that nearly killed me. In that sepia aged memory, the recollection of that gentle child will always enchant the soul of the lone survivor.
My first chapter, well, it was also my last. I’m no writer. Just a survivor, that’s all!