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Thursday, December 08, 2011

A Wider View of the Universe

imageThoreau’s name has become so synonymous with “nature” that it’s easy to imagine he was always familiar with everything that flew, swam, burrowed, or grew in the general vicinity of Concord. The truth is otherwise. A Wider View of the Universe asks, “What did Thoreau know about nature, and when did he know it?”

Robert Kuhn McGregor argues convincingly that before his sojourn at Walden Pond, Thoreau’s knowledge of nature went not much further than the utilitarian know-how of the local farmers. Even the first draft of Walden itself had remarkably little in it about nature. Chapters such as “Brute Neighbors” and “Winter Animals” came only later. Yet when he discovered nature, he did it with a vengeance, and in the last decade of his short life he was a true authority.

Kuhn has delved into his subject far enough to know that when Thoreau refers to “clams” in the Concord River, he is referring to freshwater mussels. “Crow blackbirds” are grackles, and when Thoreau writes about seeing “lizards” swimming in a ditch, he meant newts. (Lizards, I noticed some time ago, are missing from the index of the 1906 edition of the Journal—perhaps to avoid drawing attention to an embarrassing slip.)

The best reference for Thoreau’s intellectual development remains Richardson’s Henry Thoreau: A Life of the Mind, but Kuhn’s summary of what Thoreau was writing at different points in his life is a helpful contribution. And his chapter “The River” is an exceptional achievement.

Kuhn describes this chapter as “a compound descriptive analysis of a year in the life of the river during the 1850s, as derived from Henry Thoreau’s journals.” At first he seems to have done nothing more than to narrate an impressionistic description of the change of the seasons in Thoreau’s Concord.

Fast-flying migratory green-winged teal passed through in March, as did goldeneye ducks driven inland from the Atlantic Coast by heavy storms. Blue-winged teal flew past Concord a month later, resting briefly in marshes and shallow pools. Herring gulls visited briefly in March and April, feeding on newly hatched shellfish, fresh fish, and berries.

As you continue reading, though, you notice an impressive specificity in the description.

As the sun rose higher in the spring sky, plants responded to the increasing light. In the river shallows, common naiads appeared. Greenish sweetflag blossoms opened in marshy grounds along the shores, and meadow saxifrage bloomed on the higher banks. Not many varieties of flowers emerged that early, however. The greatest activity was among the river shrubs. In the shallow water, sweetgales bloomed. In marshy thickets, winterberries, black currants, leatherleafs, slender willows, and common elders came to life. On the banks, the buds of a variety of willows, alders, and maples began to expand.

But it is only in the notes at the end of the book that you comprehend the research and rigor that went into the easy flow of the chapter.

In organizing the material for this chapter, I have in some ways mirrored approaches undertaken by Thoreau himself. Working with the whole of the journals, I have abstracted his nature observations and organized them according to geographic location, particular habitat, species classifications, time of year, and so forth. The result was a series of phenological tables describing the typical behaviors of nature in the various Concord habitats as Thoreau found them. This material is far too voluminous to recreate in these pages, or even to reference. The pages of this chapter are a narrative presentation of the essence of this material; the reference notes reflect major (but not all) sources in the journals where information was derived.

Posted by geoff on 12/08 at 11:00 AM
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A Natural Curiosity - Geoff Wisner's Blog

Pizza for breakfast

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There’s just nothing like cold leftover pizza for breakfast. At least if you’re a pigeon. 

Posted by geoff on 12/08 at 09:38 AM
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Categories: NatureNew York

A Natural Curiosity - Geoff Wisner's Blog
Sunday, December 04, 2011

Pond at dusk

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The Brooklyn Botanic Garden is mobbed during the Cherry Blossom Festival, but it is beautiful—and much more peaceful—the rest of the year.

During the winter the garden closes at 4:30, but yesterday I spent the last couple of hours there. This photo captures the mood, though it’s one I took a couple of years ago. Many more can be seen at Flickr. 

Posted by geoff on 12/04 at 12:23 PM
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Categories: BrooklynNature

A Natural Curiosity - Geoff Wisner's Blog
Sunday, November 13, 2011

River teeth in Nyack

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Yesterday Jenn and I took a train up the Hudson to visit our friends Gail Hovey and Pat Hickman. On the way we stopped at the Tovin Studio Gallery in Nyack, where Pat’s work is on display.

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The first thing I noticed was a wheel of what looked at first glance like arrowheads. Pat explained that these were river teeth, a name adopted by David James Duncan for his book and journal, which offers this explanation of the name.

There is in every log a series of cross-grained, pitch-hardened masses where branches once joined the tree’s trunk. “Knots,” they’re called in a piece of lumber. But in the bed of a river, where the rest of the tree has been stripped and washed away, these knots take on a very different appearance, and so deserve a different name. “River teeth,” we called them as kids, because that’s what they look like. Like enormous fangs, ending in cross-grained root that once tapped all the way into the tree’s very heartwood.

Most of the show consists of works created from sausage casings—or in other words, the intestinal linings of animals. The material dries to a light papery sheet like parchment, which Pat wraps around objects (including some of the river teeth), colors with rust and other natural materials, assembles into ancient-looking books, and into which she embeds rusty nails and the lively-looking dried bodies of geckos. (Pat assured us that no geckos were harmed to create her art. They died of natural causes or in screen-door accidents and other mishaps.)

As another visitor commented, the overall effect of the show is beautiful and creepy—an assessment that Pat didn’t seem to mind.

Posted by geoff on 11/13 at 02:33 PM
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Categories: ArtNatureNew York

A Natural Curiosity - Geoff Wisner's Blog
Sunday, November 06, 2011

Up on the High Line

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P.S. I stopped a member of Friends of the High Line this morning and learned that the plant below is a Harlequin Glory Bower, not something from outer space. Its blossoms smell like jasmine and its leaves smell like peanut butter. (No, that’s just too strange. Maybe it is from outer space.)

For about nine years, I walked over the Brooklyn Bridge nearly every morning on my way from Fort Greene to Soho. (Sometimes I took the Manhattan Bridge for a change.)

That walk is one of the great free New York City experiences, but now that I’m working a little farther uptown, I’ve managed to work another great New York walk into my schedule. I get off the C line at 14th Street and walk down Gansevoort Street to the southern end of the High Line Park, then head uptown on the elevated walkway as far as 23rd Street before descending and heading to the office. If there’s time enough I go all the way to the end of the park at 30th Street.

Even in October and early November there are asters, coneflowers, cattails and other plants to be enjoyed. (Can anyone tell me what the plant below might be? It looks like something out of H.P. Lovecraft.)

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Posted by geoff on 11/06 at 10:17 AM
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