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A short pathway to the lake . . . |
I saw three Pileated Woodpeckers darting in front of me and
in back of me and around me the other day – while I was walking on a
footpath leading from the main street of our suburban neighborhood to the lake
where I walk daily,
right in back of
Greg’s house . . .
Greg – the neighborhood
nature photographer who died of pancreatic cancer a few months ago. I only know he died because I saw his
obituary in the newspaper. Greg lived
about two blocks up the street, and I never knew his last name or his wife’s
name, though I saw him often over the course of many years when I walked around the lake and he stood or sauntered
around the lake -- his head up in the trees or down to the ground, much equipment
always around his neck or crosswise on his chest. We talked briefly about what he had seen each
time we passed, and many years of brief talking had added up to what I call friendship.
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. . . quietly teeming with wildlife |
I think his wife moved from their house only a month after he
died – a moving van was outside of it the greater part of one day – and just
yesterday I saw a young girl talking in the front yard on her cell phone with a
great flurry of arms and a pitch of voice –
Oh
. . . the new owners, I said to myself.
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The Blue Heron is patient with the amateur photographer . . . |
Anyway, I walked along the footpath that runs in back of
Greg’s house (his former house), and I saw three Pileated Woodpeckers darting
back and forth, in front of me and in back of me – as though to accompany me on
the trail which is not very long, just long enough to let one imagine being
somewhere more expansive than the suburbs of a city . . . leading to a
small lake where I can walk a few laps while taking in a bit of nature.
And on this short walk leading to the lake, I thought of
Greg to whom I would have reported my finding when I saw him next – or who
would have beat me to it and said, “Yes, I know, I saw them too – I got the
shot!” By shot, of course, he meant the
picture. He would have known the secret
of quietly waiting on a bench or standing still – to get some wondrous close-up shot that would possibly be on the front cover of Virginia Wildlife
magazine. His “amateur” photos made
several covers of this and other magazines, he had told me. He could somehow make his lens zoom right up
to a tree, if not miraculously behind the tree, to get a snapshot of a thing you
could never see while just looking – you
can never get that close in real life – and of course the object always darts
away before you can be sure of what you’ve seen – and you can’t preserve the
thing at all except by insisting on what you saw in memory alone – and memory is
always changing . . . at least that is my experience.
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There were six right before I snapped the shot |
But the picture lasts forever – and Greg knew the miracle of
capturing the picture to prove what he had seen. He worked at it, patiently, almost every day
when he got home from work, or early in the morning, or on Fridays, his day off. He once told me he had a closet full of boxes
of negatives and photos of the wildlife that no one would guess existed at this
small lake in the middle of a suburban neighborhood, enclosed by houses and busy
streets – owls, kingfishers, cormorants, egrets, fox, and even a turtle the size
of a small ottoman! I didn’t know it at
the time (time being the course of many years) – didn’t know it, but Greg taught
me to start
looking when I walked –
to keep my eyes open, my ears too. He
said,
NO ONE WOULD BELIEVE WHAT WAS THERE . . .
The last time I talked to Greg's wife, and that was
during one of his several declines about a year ago, she said that Greg always
joked that the lake was named after him.
Everyone in the neighborhood refers to the lake as “Raintree Lake,” for
it is located right off Raintree Drive – but old county records or surveys,
Greg found out, refer to it as “Gregory's Pond.”
And so, she joked, “Greg considers this to be his pond.”
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I've seen turtles snatch goslings from beneath |
I thought of all this while the three Pileated Woodpeckers
darted side to side in front of me and in back of me – sometimes perching high
in the trees above, playing hide and seek as they went around the backside of
one tree before re-emerging on another tree to find me – all the while voicing
the characteristic laughing sound,
Ha ha
a a a . . . Ha ha ha ha ha ha a a a – at least that’s what it sounded like
to me, like they were laughing at me.
I stopped right at the spot on the footpath
behind Greg’s old house. I noticed through
the thicket of trees that all the hanging baskets and birdfeeders were gone
from the deck. The three woodpeckers
were still playing their games, in and out of trees, laughing at me – and I said,
sort of out loud, but in a whisper, “Wow, Greg, did you see those three
Pileated Woodpeckers? And right behind
your house! Did you get the shot?”
Nice. Did you take these pictures yourself?
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