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Saturday, April 29, 2023

Poetry Sunday: In May by John Burroughs

This poem caught my eye because of the first line. The Rose-breasted Grosbeaks have been passing through our yard this past week and they were accompanied by Scarlet Tanagers. It's always such a joy to see these wonderful birds as they hurry on their way to their breeding grounds. And all the other signs of spring are present as well. John Burroughs described it beautifully. Indeed, "all the world is glad with May."

In May

by John Burroughs 

When grosbeaks show a damask rose
Amid the cherry blossoms white,
And early robins' nests disclose
To loving eyes a joyous sight;

When columbines like living coals
Are gleaming 'gainst the lichened rocks,
And at the foot of mossy boles
Are young anemones in flocks;

When ginger-root beneath twin leaves
Conceals its dusky floral bell,
And showy orchid shyly weaves
In humid nook its fragrant spell;

When dandelion's coin of gold
Anew is minted on the lawn,
And apple trees their buds unfold,
While warblers storm the groves at dawn;

When such delights greet eye and ear,
Then strike thy tasks and come away:
It is the joy-month of the year,
And onward sweeps the tide of May.

When farmhouse doors stand open wide
To welcome in the balmy air,
When truant boys plunge in the tide,
And school-girls knots of violets wear;

When grapevines crimson in the shoot,
Like fin of trout in meadow stream,
And morning brings the thrush's flute
Where dappled lilies nod and dream;

When varied tints outline the trees,
Like figures sketched upon a screen,
And all the forest shows degrees
Of tawny red and yellow-green;

When purple finches sing and soar,
Then drop to perch on open wing,
With vernal gladness running o'er—
The feathered lyrist of the spring:

When joys like these salute the sense,
And bloom and perfume fill the day,
Then waiting long hath recompense,
And all the world is glad with May.

Friday, April 28, 2023

This week in birds - #547

A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment

A Snowy Egret searches for its meal while wading in the shallow waters at the edge of the Gulf of Mexico.

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The virus H5N1 is devastating the world's birds once again.

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And in Canada, leaks from tailings ponds at oil sands operations are also having a devastating effect on the environment.

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Lights Out, Texas is Audubon's campaign to have Texans turn off outside lights at night from March 1 through June 15 to avoid disorienting birds during their spring migration through the state.

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European countries are pledging to expand their use of "green power" by increasing their reliance on North Sea wind farms.

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You probably will not be surprised to read that 2022 was "nasty, deadly, costly and hot."

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Removing river barriers such as dams and weirs is allowing rivers in Europe to flow freely and migratory fish to reach their breeding areas. 

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A bird of the prairies, the Horned Lark is the American Bird Conservancy's Bird of the Week.

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Solar power microgrids in Puerto Rico are boosting the island's ability to withstand the effects of hurricanes.

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Asia is experiencing record heat for the month of April which does not bode well for the coming summer months.

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Amazing as it sounds, it seems that elephant seals are able to nap during their deep ocean dives.

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Here's a link to Audubon's native plant database. These plants can help welcome birds to your yard.

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Chimney Swifts are among my favorite summer visitors so I'm happy to see that municipalities in Canada are working to protect swift habitats.

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As the climate heats up, trees are responding by moving farther north.

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Here's a report on a 15-day bird tour in the bird-rich environment of Ecuador.

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Coral reefs are in trouble. Can they be saved?

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Big cats are endangered as well, but there is some good news on that front.

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Hellbenders, the eastern salamander, are turning to cannibalism and that is a threat to the continued survival of the species.

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An April heat wave in Spain has seen temperatures in excess of one hundred degrees Fahrenheit.

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The climate crisis that is causing drought in the Horn of Africa has been caused in no small part by human actions.

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The Menominee tribe in Wisconsin has sustainably logged its forest for 160 years but it is now facing a crisis.

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It's good to know that my "elder generation" isn't leaving all the work to save the environment to the younger generation!

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Life in the ocean's twilight zones could be facing drastic declines.

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It's nesting season along the Texas coast and Audubon Texas is on the job protecting rookeries.



Monday, April 24, 2023

Miss Aldridge Regrets by Louise Hare: A review


Wait! What? Who? Miss Aldridge

The title of this book was guaranteed to get my attention. I used to be Miss Aldridge long ago. (Actually, long, long ago now, in what seems like another lifetime.) Ah, well, time marches on and so do I, so I read the book about this Miss Aldridge, and here's what I learned about her.

Lena Aldridge had hoped for a brilliant career in the theater but when we meet her she is reduced to being a nightclub singer. We are in London in 1936, so, fraught and disappointing times to begin with. Her married lover has just dumped Lena and she's wondering if anything is ever going to go her way.

Then, to make matters worse, her best friend's husband is murdered and her world truly seems to be falling apart. When a stranger unaccountably offers her a chance at a starring role on Broadway and a first-class ticket on the Queen Mary to take her there, she jumps at the chance without questioning her good fortune.

But then bad luck seems to have followed her on board when a fellow passenger is murdered in a strikingly similar manner to her friend's husband. Suspicion falls on her since she has now been in the vicinity of two murders during a short period of time. How can she extricate herself from this mess and maybe solve a murder in the process?

This was the first entry in what is dubbed the "Canary Club" mysteries, the Canary Club being the nightclub at which Lena performs. So it seems that more murders will follow, more chances for the nightclub singer to play detective. It was not a bad start. Lena is a sympathetic character and, of course, the late 1930s in London and in New York were interesting times, to put it mildly. There's plenty of material for drama there. It remains to be seen what Louise Hare will make of it.


 

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Poetry Sunday: The Song of the Mischievous Dog by Dylan Thomas

There are many quite well-known poems by Dylan Thomas. This is not one of them. But it made me smile when I happened upon it last week. Perhaps it may do the same for you. 

The Song of the Mischievous Dog

by Dylan Thomas

There are many who say that a dog has its day,
And a cat has a number of lives;
There are others who think that a lobster is pink,
And that bees never work in their hives.

There are fewer, of course, who insist that a horse
Has a horn and two humps on its head,
And a fellow who jests that a mare can build nests
Is as rare as a donkey that's red.

Yet in spite of all this, I have moments of bliss,
For I cherish a passion for bones,
And though doubtful of biscuit, I'm willing to risk it,
And I love to chase rabbits and stones.

But my greatest delight is to take a good bite
At a calf that is plump and delicious;
And if I indulge in a bite at a bulge,
Let's hope you won't think me too vicious.

Friday, April 21, 2023

This week in birds - #546

 A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:

Spotted Towhee searching for a meal. I love those red eyes! The photograph was taken on a trip to New Mexico.

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A rainy winter has helped to create a glorious spring in California where a "super bloom" of wildflowers is in progress. Here's an explanation of how it came to be.

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The Houston Arboretum had become badly overgrown, but never fear; the goats are on the job

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Sex for tigers in a zoo can be an iffy and dangerous thing so sometimes their caretakers have to intercede.

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Many waterways in America are endangered but the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon may be the most endangered of all.

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A record amount of seaweed appears to be headed across the Atlantic toward Florida. 

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A virtual "insect apocalypse" seems to be underway. Can it be reversed?

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When buildings are taken down in the city, what becomes of all that material? "Urban mining" may offer a solution.

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Eastern Hellbender males seem to be turning cannibalistic which is a threat to the continuing survival of the species.

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Elephant seals can thrive on as little as two hours of sleep per 24-hour period.

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The Atacama Desert in Chile may be the perfect place on Earth for an astronomical observatory and that is why a giant new telescope is going up there

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Birds are vanishing from our skies and that is a crisis for all of us.

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Do you still have lightning bugs where you live?

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Are you familiar with BirdCast? It's a way of looking down from above - in other words, a bird's-eye view. 

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Nature has some important secret weapons to fight against the effects of climate change.

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Clean energy has been quite successful in Texas but it seems that the state's Republicans are working hard to change that.

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The biggest cause of the water crisis in the West walks on four legs and munches grass.

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Parrots making video calls? Yes, that is a thing!

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North America's bat species face many perils including disease, climate change, and habitat loss.

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A unique intercontinental collaboration has helped to ensure the survival of the Lord Howe Island stick insect - at least for now.

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The author of Where the Crawdads Sing is a wildlife conservationist who is willing to make enemies in her work to protect wildlife and their habitats.

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Meet the cockeye squid, an animal that can look in two directions at once.

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Dam removals in California are benefiting many species there. 

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano: A review

 

Hello Beautiful is essentially a retelling of the plot of Little Women. We have the four Padavano sisters instead of the March sisters. Instead of Meg, Jo, Amy, and Beth, we have Julia, Sylvie, Cecilia, and Emiline. They are part of a Catholic household with a devout mother who taught them to respect the saints and a loving father who was a dreamer unable to provide an adequate financial base for his family. The book's title is the greeting that their father always used for his daughters. 

Julia is the ambitious high-achiever in the family. She is like a second mother to the other girls. Sylvie is the romantic who is waiting for a man to come along and sweep her off her feet. Cecilia and Emeline are twins who tend to live in their own world but they have quite different personalities. Cecilia is forthright and plain-speaking. Emeline is the peacemaker in the family who tries to make everyone feel better.

Then along comes William, an introvert from a family that neglected him. He had a sister who died as a child and his parents were stuck with her memory and unable to move on. 

William's salvation comes when he starts playing basketball with his peers. He finds a community and support with his teammates. He goes to Northwestern University on a basketball scholarship and meets Julia Padavano and the ambitious high-achiever chooses him to be her husband. But marrying Julia really means he is marrying the whole Padavono clan.

William's basketball career ends in injury. Julia, the fixer, sets out to make William into her ideal husband. That includes making him a college professor. They have a daughter, Alice. But then Julia's plans go a bit awry. 

William is overcome by depression and tries to end it all but fortunately, he is unsuccessful in the attempt. Sylvie becomes his salvation who pulls him back into life.

This is a family drama that draws the reader in and makes her care about all of these characters. Each character is multi-layered and three-dimensional in their make-up. Moreover, each of the sisters felt like a personal friend and I wanted the best for each of them. It isn't often that I feel so emotionally invested in characters and it is very rare indeed that I feel that a novel is worthy of a five-star rating. This is that book. 






Sunday, April 16, 2023

City of the Beasts by Isabel Allende: A review

 

This book was first published in 2002 so it has been around for quite a while, but I had never encountered it although I have read other books by Isabel Allende. The book seems primarily directed toward a young adult audience, of which I meet only the second word in that description.

The two main characters are teenagers Alexander and Nadia. When Alexander's mother becomes quite ill, he is sent to New York to stay with his grandmother, Kate. She is a magazine reporter who is irascible and tough-minded, not qualities that one would normally associate with the word "grandmother." She had been planning a trip to the Amazon to search for a gigantic legendary creature known only as the Beast and to encounter the lost tribes who live in that region. Now, she'll be taking Alexander along with her.

The local guide for the trip into the Amazon has a teenage daughter named Nadia, and she and Alex quickly bond. Other members of the expedition include an anthropologist, a doctor, and a local entrepreneur. Pretty soon we come to suspect that not all of these people are pure of heart and at least one may have ulterior motives. 

Once in the Amazon, a local tribe known as the People of the Mists take Alexander and Nadia and they travel with them through jungle, mountains, and caves. The two young people get an education in what it is like to live as primitive hunter-gatherers.

Alexander and Nadia are presented as remarkably rational thinkers who are able to reason things out and come to logical solutions to problems. In this regard, they are more adept than many of the adults around them. 

This apparently was the first in a trilogy featuring these characters. I enjoyed it quite a bit and, at some point, would not be averse to reading the other two books, but I already have a full reading list and they will just have to take their place in the queue.