Current:Home > InvestA Walk in the Woods With My Brain on Fire: Spring -TradeGrid
A Walk in the Woods With My Brain on Fire: Spring
Chainkeen Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 18:39:24
PLEASANT VALLEY, Mass.—Two visits to this wildlife sanctuary. One week apart. I came to report the arrival of spring, an under-covered story. In the hope, too, that the new season might extinguish the fire in my brain, ablaze in the Anthropocene: The accelerating heat with its cascading catastrophes; the barbaric wars with their crimes against humanity; scorching hatreds shared instantly everywhere. Our raging modern inferno.
And yet, we are in the midpoint of a great annual renewal, marked by the seasonal migration of creatures beyond number flying their way north. Might the incessant flapping of billions of pairs of wings cool down the hemisphere? Surely birdsong is balm for our blisters and burns? I went looking for remedy with little idea of what I was soon to witness.
It turned out not to be the birds. You can hear them, but they’re hard to see. Sure, I had an adequate pair of binoculars with me, and a bird ID app on my phone. Hopeless tools for an earthbound biped like me. My naked ears were far more useful. They could hear a woodpecker knocking into a distant tree. Mourning doves cooing in a branch above. An unseen swallow buzzing past my scalp. Blackbirds shrieking among the tall phragmites. Though it was daytime, an owl hooted, and a bullfrog seemed to answer. A paddling mallard provoked the obnoxious honking of a pair of rowdy geese. Only two of them, so damn loud. My notes also say: Fiddleheads. Bees. Chipmunks. Flash of orange. (In retrospect, likely an oriole.)
I was grasping one thing at a time, cataloging the natural order—an outsider to it. What if I tried to listen to everything at once? It took repeated effort to gain fleeting entry into a parallel world that wasn’t mine. A fluid orchestra of countless musicians perfectly riffing. The forest multi-tonal. Deciduous jazz. Not a single bad seat in the house. The debut of an up-tempo composition I’ll call How many dialects of warbler can the robin understand? Never to be played again.
What became apparent is that I don’t speak nature. The other sapiens I encountered didn’t seem to, either. A wholesome church group of well-dressed young adults. A guy in a baseball cap effusive about sighting a beaver. A teenager in pants striped red and white sporting a nose ring. All of us of such varied plumage yet belonging to a single species.
To us it was Saturday morning. How laughable. I had arrived at nine—much too late to get the worm—and now, after a few hours as I began walking out, I turned my gaze upwards. I saw the architecture of tree branches; bud break of leaves; the sky. Oh! The bird reaIm! The aerial kingdom! I would need to return to see it in a new light.
My neighbor remembers when she was a young girl, the birds were so loud in the early morning that to sleep she’d have to plug her ears. We didn’t realize how much things were changing around us over the last half century. The human population was roughly doubling from four to eight billion. On the other hand, the population of breeding birds was declining by three billion, a 30 percent drop—in North America alone.
The last time birds had it so bad might have been when an asteroid six or nine miles wide slammed into the Earth, eons before hominids first walked upright. With two hundred million years of evolutionary history in their bones, birds are confronting a relatively instantaneous collective demise at our hands.
We’ve been hearing these dire warnings for many years, yet the environmental carnage continues unabated. It’s part of what science calls biodiversity loss, the path we’ve trod in the Anthropocene, with its thousandfold increase in extinctions. We have no shame.
The natural world is thus becoming quieter and more homogenous. Here’s how a scientific abstract described the diminishment of avian music in North America and Europe:
We integrate citizen science bird monitoring data with recordings of individual species to reveal a pervasive loss of acoustic diversity and intensity of soundscapes across both continents over the past 25 years, driven by changes in species richness and abundance.
These results suggest that one of the fundamental pathways through which humans engage with nature is in chronic decline, with potentially widespread implications for human health and well-being.
What the forests must have sounded like, even just a hundred years ago.
Don’t imagine it’s poetic justice that human languages are rapidly disappearing, too. It’s a parallel tragedy. Some scholars estimate 50 percent of the 7,000 tongues that exist now will be severely endangered or gone by this century’s end. Others say 90 percent. Mostly, the languages of First Peoples will vanish, and with them will go oral libraries of rare human knowledge; about animals and plants and nature’s remedies; legends and histories; poetry and song. The people who speak nature, potential codebreakers of the climate crisis, their words silenced forever.
In these woods in this season there’s little nourishment for such broodings. This time I arrived at 6:30 a.m. and encountered great good fortune: the cloudy sky was an even dome of soft backlight behind the bursting branches overhead. I took the path toward Pike’s Pond and followed the trail along the downstream flow of Yokun Brook, gazing upward, mouth open, witnessing the slow-motion explosion of spring and its unconditional, inexhaustible, eternal generosity.
Four hours looking up like this, walking carefully so as not to stumble or fall, until the spectacle dissolved as the sun gained height, burned away the clouds and turned the sky postcard blue.
For Further Seeing:
Perfect Days, a film by Wim Wenders (2023)
Evil Does Not Exist, a film by Ryûsuke Hamaguchi (2023)
Share this article
veryGood! (6)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- 'Devastation is absolutely heartbreaking' from Southern California wildfire
- New 'Yellowstone' is here: Season 5 Part 2 premiere date, time, where to watch
- ONA Community Introduce
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- A Pipeline Runs Through It
- Everard Burke Introduce
- Wicked Director Jon M. Chu Reveals Name of Baby Daughter After Missing Film's LA Premiere for Her Birth
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Horoscopes Today, November 9, 2024
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Horoscopes Today, November 9, 2024
- Lala Kent Swears by This Virgo-Approved Accessory and Shares Why Stassi Schroeder Inspires Her Fall Style
- 'Climate change is real': New York parks employee killed as historic drought fuels blazes
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Tennessee fugitive accused of killing a man and lying about a bear chase is caught in South Carolina
- Kelly Rowland and Nelly Reunite for Iconic Performance of Dilemma 2 Decades Later
- 'I was in total shock': Woman wins $1 million after forgetting lotto ticket in her purse
Recommendation
Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
California voters reject proposed ban on forced prison labor in any form
ONA Community Introduce
A list of mass killings in the United States this year
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Fire crews on both US coasts battle wildfires, 1 dead; Veterans Day ceremony postponed
Barbora Krejcikova calls out 'unprofessional' remarks about her appearance
Arizona Supreme Court declines emergency request to extend ballot ‘curing’ deadline