Tag Archive | frog pond

Simple Pleasures

One day at the pond I saw three small frogs and two big frogs. My times in the pond have brought more peace and joy than I could have imagined, especially when I find myself eye to eye with a frog. Even though I’m not posting every day right now, I’m still grateful every day; even though it’s been a challenging summer, I’m still grateful every day. Simply experiencing myself as another living being in this little ecosystem fills me with gratitude.

Progress continues, slowly but surely.

And with progress comes motivation to spend relaxing time at the pond as well as work time in it. Once again I can sit with coffee in the morning at the little blue table, listen to the birds, smell living water, rest in open awareness with contentment. This morning I brought my planner and stopped in delight when I dropped it on the table. The most simple pleasures. Color. Sound. Scent. Senses.

I get an inordinate amount of delight from this small crystal ball which I bought years ago. It was sold as a sort of external lens for photography, but I never did much with it that way. I simply loved the simple perfection of it on a table, surrounded by ancestral cats. But the other evening I took it down to the pond to play, just for fun. No great shots resulted, but the simple pleasure of play sufficed.

I’m grateful for my first fresh tomato of summer–not from my garden, for sure, but brought from the market by a friend, along with Olathe Sweet sweet corn, a local summer essential.
Another day this week I savored a cream cheese and smoked salmon open-face sandwich with a sliced red onion from the garden. Grateful, as always, for the extravagance of food.

I’m grateful for the little dingo who finds the tortoise every evening. I like to know where he’s tucked in for the night even when we don’t need to bring him in, and it keeps Wren in training. In fact, she’s trained me: If we haven’t looked for him by dusk, she agitates until we do. The other night we went out between thunderstorms–she loves her job so much she braved the weather–and she found this hole under the fence. I panicked for a second calculating if Biko could have escaped, but he was tucked in under a sagebrush a foot inside the yard. It took a moment to dawn on me that something had tried to dig under in that spot precisely to get to him! What could it have been? I think it had just happened and Wren had scared it off. We filled the hole and have been vigilant about checking the fenceline morning and evening since then.

Biko has a number of usual spots he tucks in overnight, like the sagebrush where he was threatened (which he hasn’t used since that evening), but this is not one of them. Only once or twice in all his years has he tucked in under this spirea, but Wren found him tonight just the same.
Camouflage Cat along the driveway

Laughing in the Pond

I’ve learned over the past few years how not to tend a pond. For a constellation of reasons, I let the curly rushes get out of control. (Among them, I didn’t know or bother to figure out the best time to not disturb the frogs breeding cycle.) I meant to clear some out last summer but didn’t get to it. With this summer half over, it was time to dive in. I found to my dismay that not only was the top of the pond choked with rushes, but they had grown a mat of roots two feet thick all the way to the floor of the pond. Yesterday I discovered that getting in and pulling wasn’t going to cut it, so today I took a pruning saw and literally cut blocks of roots out, heaving them up onto the lip one at a time.

Good Tim was working elsewhere in the yard, and when I had a big enough pile I hollered, and he came with the garden cart to haul a load to the compost. He laughed at the spectacle, which made me laugh. Then he asked, “Do you still have fish in there, or just frogs?”

“No fish, and I don’t think there are anymore frogs either,” I said. “I think it’s gone anaerobic.”

“There’s a frog right there,” he said, “right behind you. A big one.”

I turned around slowly and two feet behind me, floating on a mat of lily roots I was saving to replant, sat a beautiful northern leopard frog. I laughed. He laughed. I kept laughing. I don’t remember the last time I laughed so lightly with pure joy. It’s been a rough summer. I sat back into the rushes, resting in the cushion of their massive root mat, cool water up to my shoulders, and laughed.

Good Tim hauled a huge load of roots and rushes off to the compost, and headed off to his next job. I sat in the pond and pulled some more roots and laughed some more. Wren always has to check on me when I laugh, so she came to the edge and then accidentally jumped in. All summer she’s just leapt across the pond or into the rushes chasing grasshoppers, and only gotten her toes wet. I grabbed her and hugged her to me, sitting in the root cushion, and whispered how nice and cool it was, how she was safe, what a good girl she is, until she stopped shaking and relaxed a little. Then I released her onto the edge and she raced off to roll herself dry. I sat and laughed a few more minutes and then climbed out of the pond and came in for a hot shower.

Later, both of us dry and happy, we checked out the apricot tree. I’m grateful that neighbor Syd brought me some apricots from her tree, because of the zillion babies that had been on mine, only a couple of dozen managed to hang on long enough to mature and ripen. Most of those were way out of reach on one tall limb, where the birds have been feasting on them for days. Oh well.

Topaz enjoys lap time on her brand new rag rug that Garden Buddy made for her. She and I are both grateful for it! More gratitude for rag rugs coming soon.

An Opportune Concatenation of Events

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Deborah brought a trugful of apples from her trees…

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… and I got a big bowl full from the Fuji.

I’ll be honest, I have a fraught relationship with apples. At one point I decided they’re more trouble than they’re worth. If you don’t at least slice them, or better yet peel then slice them, and you just eat one out of your hand: you have to bite hard, chew a lot, and the skin inevitably slides up between my teeth and gets stuck, sometimes even slicing my gum.

One day I embarked upon a quest to find an apple that was worth the trouble. After many months of many tastings, I did find one. It became clear that for me the only apple worth eating off the tree is a Fuji. So I bought a tree. And now, that little tree that has struggled with not the best placement, with insufficient protection from deer year after year, with frost at just the wrong time, that little tree by my front gate is feeding me plenty of apples worth eating right off the tree.

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Pamela loaned us this amazing gadget that peels, cores and slices all in one! Apples will never be too much trouble again!

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Meanwhile, the almond tree, who I knew would let me know when it was ready to let go, has let me know.

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Half the tree in a big wooden bowl, the other half so high I’ll need to pick them from the deck or knock them down, my vision for this tree finally come to fruition.

Almonds, broken open or nearly so, losing their green, taking on autumnal hue. Inside leathery fruit already drying in desert winds lies an almond in the shell, some of these already consenting to crack. Inside the tawny shell not quite set, a milky tan or brown-skinned gem… Bitter. Those with the brown skins are bitter, and even some of the skinless ones a little bitter. They will benefit from blanching.

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After husking I lay the nuts out to dry in their shells, and will freeze them shelled or unshelled when I can hear most of them rattle in the shell.

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Rose hips almost ripe and ready to be turned into jelly.

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How many frogs? Through benign neglect of my fish ponds they’ve become frog ponds. I counted a total of seventeen northern leopard frogs in both ponds at once this afternoon, an all-time record.

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Two color morphs of the leopard frog, brown and green, communing at the edge of the pond. Each summer for the past few years I’ve seen a few more frogs. At least in this hazardous world where amphibians are declining at an astonishing rate, my little pond has become a haven for this wonderful native species.

And on a more somber note, with a threadbare segue, a plea for our own endangered haven, both here in our valley and on this fragile, spinning planet as a whole:

These next few weeks create our future, in so many ways. Will we make it be the one we want to see? A future honoring our planet, mother nature, our atmosphere, father sky, brother sun, sister moon? Will we choose reverence for life in a meaningful way before it’s too late?

We don’t often have a concatenation of events that provides us with as much opportunity to influence our future as we have in the next four to six weeks; right now, we have two such opportunities, one on a local level and the other on a global level. We are in a bardo now between great potential for harm and great potential for slamming on the brakes to slow the decimation of Earth.

Until November 1, we have a window to make our voices heard and direct the policy guiding the public lands that surround our valley for the next two to three decades. This is not another one-time fight. What’s at stake this time is the Resource Management Plan (RMP) that will direct the use of public lands surrounding and within our valley for the next 20-30 years.

“Because BLM did not consider new information on earthquakes, human health impact, climate change impact, and environmental damage caused by hydraulic fracturing, injection wells, and ongoing oil and gas operations, along with its inadequate risk analysis, its draft Resource Management Plan is fundamentally flawed.” ~citizensforahealthycommunity.org

We have a singular opportunity with this RMP. Let’s flood the Bureau of Land Management with ten times as many letters as we sent last time, four years ago, when this fight was for a one-time lease sale. Let’s send ten thousand letters, twenty thousand, thirty thousand. We have the chance to say now, in the policy that’s set for the next two generations: NO!

Our local conservation groups have made it so easy to submit comments. The cogent letter is written for you. Fill in a few blanks, add any personal comments, and mail or email your letter today. You can submit as many comments as you like; unlike voting, you’re not limited to one. And you don’t have to live here to take a stand. Please share and share this plea and these links to help save the organic foods capital of Colorado.

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North Fork Valley organic fruit for sale in one of many markets our farmers supply throughout the summer. photos by Cynthia Wilcox

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Though the industry strives to convince us otherwise, there’s a lot of indisputable evidence that fracking fluids are toxic to life, human and otherwise, that the effects of drilling and wastewater injection can spread far from the site, that spills devastate land and water, that transport by pipeline, train or truck can cause massive explosions. The list of deleterious effects goes on and on, from air pollution and habitat destruction (human and other) to induced earthquakes. According to the USGS, induced earthquakes have risen dramatically in the past five years as a result of drilling activities in states including Ohio, Texas, Oklahoma, and Colorado.

We need to stake our claim to our public lands, our air, our watersheds, and not let them be exploited for profit by a few powerful corporations. We must protect all that is essential to our lives: The sights and sounds and experiences that make life here so precious, the food, the water, the soils that nurture not just human health but whole ecosystem health. We must speak now, loud and clear, spread the word, and enlist the voices of all our neighbors, of our friends and families far and wide, of anyone who has ever lived here or hopes to, of anyone who has ever enjoyed visiting this valley or hopes to, of anyone who enjoys the fruits and meats and wines of this valley.

We can make change if we undertake it at the right time, not so much when the stars align as when good intentions and political schedules coincide; in these few transformational moments what we say and do can actually make a difference. This is the time to make our choices, raise our voices in a way that counts. This is not the time to be resigned.