Saturday, April 22, 2017
Earth Day
In our tiny patch of boreal forest rabbits turn from white to brown, robins arrive promptly with military precision, nuthatches cling upside down to branches, hop gleefully from trunk to trunk, juncos swarm in packs of gray across the thawing ground, deer stroll, red squirrels leap from tree to tree, tails whirling, owls fill up the twilit hours with voices you feel in your chest, the first haze of buds appear on that tree, and that one, grouse explode from cover with heart-stopping clamour, tiny orange butterflies land on dried out grasses, somewhere bears plod, woodpeckers knock against trees and laugh at each other, ravens reel, a mosquito or two, water rushes, there is green under brown, sunlight and patches of snow.
Thursday, April 20, 2017
Sad-dog days
Murdoch emerges from his kennel extra rumpled these days,
his eyebrows low and haphazard, his beard askew, the fur at his neck swirled in
not quite the right direction. He has had a rough few months.
“Sorry Murds,” I say for what feels like the millionth time
as he brightens slightly when I don my boots. “It is a quick out and back in
again.” He is getting better about that, but his instinct to pounce on a stick,
spin around on the spot, run like the wind through the trees and egg Molly into
a one-sided game of chase, still simmers just below the surface and I so
desperately want to say, “Bring me a stick Murdoch! Go, go, go! Catch this
ball! Run faster! Faster!”
But he injured his leg in February, a slip on the ice in
pursuit of a stick. He turned one way and his knee went the other. “Oh no!” I
sympathized as he glanced my way and then walked back to where I stood on the
bright, blankness of the snow-covered field. He wasn’t limping then, but he
walked instead of running, he knew he had injured himself, and then he stood
beside me, pressed his head against my leg as I lavished him with praise.
“You’re a good boy Murds,” hands petting his face, running the length of his
body to his back right leg. “I guess we’re going home now,” I said and then,
“Whoa! No Murds, just walking,” when he tried to leap sideways as though my
touch had somehow miraculously made it all better. I wish.
A week later, after not enough rest, when the weather warmed
and the snow became a thinning crust of white atop a soft plunge of two feet to
the forest floor below, Murdoch left the sturdy, packed trail and I winced and
cursed as I watched him flail across the snow, punching through every other
step, legs working too hard to buck and pull his body along. He returned to the
house limping and later, when he wouldn’t put weight on that leg, I felt sick
to my stomach as I imagined his carefree days of running and playing and just
being Murdoch coming to an end.
“Why did I take you out today?” I asked him that night as he
sat with his back legs askew and stared at me with his wide brown eyes. I would
take it back if I could.
But since then he has been on leash, outside for ten minutes
at the most and, while he is disgruntled about the whole thing, his leg is
getting better.
“I wish we still had those leg braces Bear used,” I said to
Morgan, trying to imagine Murdoch wearing the little red “cast-away pants”. But
we gave those away after Bear no longer needed them.
So we wait, for now, because there is also the matter of
Murdoch’s teeth, the broken ones, the pocket in his gum and, we’re pretty sure,
a cavity in a molar, all leading up to a sore mouth, an impending dental
surgery, and a very rumpled Murdoch.
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Cleo around the internet
“Cleo?” I say as she walks into the room, stomping in the no-nonsense way she does. “What are you doing to promote your book?”
She stops, snaps her head in my direction, green eyes alert
and piercing as though she is caught off guard, as though she had no idea I was
there when really, of course, she did. “Promote?” she says with her sharp gaze
before turning away and striding to the beanbag chair. “I have people for
that.”
Oh. Right. I guess that’s me.
“The least you could do is pose with it,” I say as Cleo’s
dainty white paws work to carve a comfortable well for herself in the chair.
There is the rustle of a million Styrofoam balls as she settles in and I hand
her the book.
“Fine,” she says, rolling her eyes. “I guess I have to do everything
around here.”
Hardly. But thanks anyway Cleo.
And thanks to the kind souls out there who are helping to
spread the word about Cleo’s story. I love seeing her face pop up in different
places online and knowing her story is being shared.
Cats and Diabetes introduced Cleo to the world by allowing
me to write a blog post and add Cleo to the Sugarbabies page. And, recently, I
was so pleased to find this review of The Comeback Cat at Melissa’s Mochas, Mysteries and Meows, a fun and informative blog about cats and books
Thursday, April 13, 2017
A Murdoch moment
I watch Murdoch from the door, stand to the side of the big
window at its center to cut the glare from the light in the kitchen behind me.
His black shape sits at the edge of the deck, hints of gold about him from the
outside light that encompasses him, his back is to the door. He stares out into
the darkness.
He would sit there for hours I think sometimes, especially
now, this time of year as the ice melts and streams run through the woods, past
the house carrying earthy scents of things long dormant beneath layers of snow.
Murdoch would like to just wander, be free to come and go as he pleases, while
I sit at home sick with worry.
He comes inside and then five minutes later he tells me he
is desperate to go out again, imploring brown eyes, excited toe-tapping,
stealing socks and bringing them to me.
“Do you need to pee?” I ask, even though I know he doesn’t.
But his ears perk up, his mouth snaps shut, his eyes sparkle and bore into
mine. “Yes. Yes I do,” he says and spins on the spot, trots towards the door,
throwing glances over his shoulder to make sure I am following.
I clip him to his line and he marches across the threshold
from the warmth of the house to the crisp snap of evening air, hints of snow
and decaying leaves. And then he sits at the edge of the deck staring into the
dark.
What does he smell, I wonder, his nose in the air, head
gently bobbing as he inhales the evening. And, as I always do, I wonder if he
is happy, if he imagines a different life for himself, one full of adventure,
living on the land, always on the move. There is a part of me that wants that
too. I imagine us together sometimes, just wandering the world, through
forests and over mountains, companions at large, travelers, explorers.
We would build fires at night to keep warm, find soft,
sheltered places to sleep, watch the stars and listen to the woods come alive.
We would be separate and together. We are similar like that, very much liking
our own space but appreciative of company too, being able to share individual
discoveries.
I stand at the door and watch Murdoch sitting on the deck,
his satiny black fur catching the light here and there, his edges blending into
the darkness beyond. Part of me wants to sit there with him, stare into the
night, smell the spring air on his fur and I wish, not for the first time, that
he could tell me what he is thinking.
Thursday, April 6, 2017
Defending the trees
A flash of red catches my eye when I pass the window on the
stairs. I turn to see one of the pileated woodpeckers that hang about our
woods, her black wings wrap around her like a great cloak and she clings to the
tree outside our front door, working steadily at the trunk of the large poplar.
White chips fly away to the ground.
I run down the rest of the stairs to the kitchen and then
down the final steps to the entryway, dash past the dogs, “Wait here,” I say,
and burst out the front door.
“Hey!” I say to her, quick and fast, hoping to startle her
from her task. Ten feet above my head she stops what she is doing, cocks her
head sideways and peers down at me with her round, glassy eye.
“You can’t live there,” I say, eyeing up the hole she has
started, a bright fresh wound on the side of the tree. “Pick another tree,” I
tell her. “Like that one over there.” And I point to another poplar not too far
away that already has a great hole in it, made a number of years ago by the
pileateds and every year since has been home to new broods of yellow-shafted
flickers.
I know she will not live in a used hole, but I suggest it
anyway. The pileateds are amazing. I love to have the birds living right
outside our home but I do not want to sacrifice every tree to them. There are
others dotted about our property, older poplars with great caverns already
hacked out inside.
“Go use one of the other holes,” I say to her and clap my
hands loudly over my head. She continues to stare, her beak parted slightly as
though considering, and then returns to her task, ripping great strips of wood
from inside the tree.
I stomp my feet and cast about for something to throw. Pale
chunks of wood freshly plucked from the inside of the tree litter the dark,
weathered planks of the deck. I find a small grey stick, a twig really that has
fallen from this very tree, I pull it from the receding ice and toss it up
towards the bird. I don’t want to hit her, I don’t want to scare her away
completely I just want her to stop building her nest here, in this tree,
compromising its structure.
The twig bounces of the trunk a foot below the bird and she
takes no notice. I find another and try again, and another. The pileated
clearly does not see me as any kind of threat.
“Go!” I yell at her and clap my hands again and then turn
and open the door. “Come on guys,” I say to the dogs, “Chase her away!” Murdoch
and Molly pour out the door onto the deck. “Up there,” I say, pointing at the
bird. “Come on guys. Bark!”
Molly skips off the deck and is immediately consumed by the
task of finding a good fetching stick but Murdoch stands beside me. He is
excited because I am excited, but he does not see the bird. He stands rigid,
ready, and scans the forest immediately around the house.
“No, up there,” I say again. “Murds, up there.” And I wave
my hands over my head. “Go away.”
Murdoch does not look up he does not see the bird that has
paused again in her work to take in the dogs. ‘Yeah,’ I think, ‘See? Dogs, and
people, and there’s cats too.’ I think that just having the dogs there and me
clapping my hands, talking loudly would be enough for the bird to reconsider
this spot. But the dogs and I do not concern her.
As the bird returns to shaping a home from the tree trunk, I
cast about for more stuff to throw. I toss up another twig, and another, and
then a bigger stick. They all bounce harmlessly off the silvered bark. Murdoch
looks up then, he sees the bird, but he remains silent.
“Murds, come on,” I say. “Chase it away.” He watches it, but
doesn’t say a word. The bird has stopped again, hopped sideways around the
tree. Her eye focuses on us below.
I pick up a chunk of bark about the size of the palm of my
hand. I am sure it is a piece she has torn from the tree and tossed away. It is
heftier than the twigs and when I throw it, it makes a quiet ‘tock’ sound as it
ricochets off the trunk.
The bird cocks her head one more time and then, finally, she
leaves. She opens her great black wings, exposing the white beneath, and swoops
over our heads, away across the clearing where our clothes line runs from the
corner of the house to a towering tree.
I watch her go with some relief, even while I imagine her
planning her return, as the red crest on her head glows brightly in a flash of
sunlight before she disappears into the forest.
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