GlobalGayz.com
September 4, 2010
At 0655 this
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I watched with a bit of wonder at this dance of light on stone, the ethereal distant and the hard local. Then it occurred to me this was the end of the trip for these few beams; they had traveled 93 million miles to land here in this room, to morph themselves from light to heat.
The time it takes light to travel this distance is 500 seconds or 8.333 minutes. Is that not astounding--to travel 186,000 miles a second across an infinity of space to stop here? Other rays of course--most--don't strike the earth and they're still whizzing into the ethos.
It was a wondrous--and literal--wake up reminder of the splendor of nature on this tiny patch of the planet here in the woods of western Massachusetts. Our cottage is surrounded by trees and forest shrubbery. It is enclosed by nature. No lawn, no neighboring houses, one weathered utility pole (with a couple of unavoidable wires), a scattering of boulders and rocks amid miles of mulching leaves from seasons past.
Last night I heard scratching under the house, a chipmunk or a mouse--I couldn't tell--nesting or scavenging. It happens regularly since the cottage sits on piers with no foundation. It makes a good winter refuge from the snow for little critters.
Last year two black bears, about three feet tall on all fours, came walking up our unpaved
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Occasionally a deer comes into view munching and chewing branches and leaves. We have no flower garden to offer them a sweet blossom. They stand tall and with ears cocked listening alertly for any unusual sound, eyes constantly surveying the moment. The slightest movement inside the house sends them jumping away with amazing speed despite the rough terrain and abundant trees. They never seem to trip or hit anything.
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There are of course our local chipmunks that burrow little holes and scamper about gathering food bits. They run short distances then stop to look around, then dart to another stop among the low-lying foliage. They and the squirrels like acorns and there are plenty of these since our house is surrounded by huge 80-foot oak trees that constantly drop their hard nuts onto our roof and on to our un-housed car, with not so quiet sounds. An inch+ wide high-top acorn sounds like a gun shot when it drops straight down to hit the metal roof of the car. Fortunately it's an old car ('97 Geo Tracker--four wheel drive to negotiate the steep driveway) so the dents don't matter. I don't think the re-sale value is going to be much!
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Added to all this organic life, the wind often washes through the trees swaying them around and making sounds not unlike ocean waves rushing ashore. Some days it rains and the wondrous sprinkling, tapping, and pattering can be heard through the ceiling of the house. Sometimes accompanied by lightning and thunder. Put them all together and we have nature's crescendo swirling furiously around us: thrashing whirring wind, slapping rain, flashes of electric bolts. It's nature giving a great performance and offering its own thunderous clapping responses.
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It's all quite a treat, free of charge and hands-free.
1 comment:
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