The heat is on at the Falls of the Ohio. It is looking like this will be a summer to remember. In the Louisville area, we have already set all time record highs for the month of June. Yesterday, it was 105 degrees here or around 40 degrees Celsius in the rest of the world. Coupled with the heat is a lack of rain. So, when it’s this miserable outside…who in their right mind would be walking around under this crazy sun? That would be me! I’m here at the river’s edge and imagining that I’m one of the dozens of herons I can see fishing from their spots by the fossil rocks. I take my shoes off and cool my feet in the river. This provides some respite. It occurs to me that perhaps these herons aren’t fishing after all, but have discovered that they can beat the heat by wading in the water?
All the coal flake designs from the last post are gone. In places, I can see how someone has dragged their foot deliberately across the patterns to erase them. Why a person would feel compelled to do this is beyond me? I’m nearly numb to the idea by now. I am actually more surprised when any of my projects manages to survive for any time at all. I have the images and that will have to do. I do have this other coal project going out here. It really isn’t any thing special. Just coal defining the perimeter around a patch of grass I noticed growing next to a piece of driftwood. I imagine that the wood provides some measure of protection from the wind or catches more dew and that is why this very small area of grass is growing. The coal ring is meant to call attention to this. So far, it has managed to survive being stepped upon, but if it doesn’t rain soon…I’m afraid my small patch of grass is a goner.
After cooking in the sun for a bit, I returned to my Styro-studio under the shade of the willow trees. There is a trade-off. Although I’m not under the direct scrutiny of the sun, I do however, become a tempting meal for mosquitoes and biting flies. Looking around, I can see that I have had visitors because the Styro-figure I had stashed here has been destroyed and someone has attempted to create another figure from its remains. An old pair of sun glasses I had previously found was just barely hanging on to the new figure’s eye-less head. I do like it when people play along and imagine other possibilities. I was looking through my larder of polystyrene chunks and wondering what to make next when I spotted some movement in the near distance. Grabbing my camera I carefully stalked behind the trees and caught another member of the Falls’ distinctive fauna unawares. Here is my informal portfolio of the River Cat.
Hiding behind a log I saw the River Cat hunting. Among its habits…it is an ambush predator that conceals itself along the trails used by its prey which includes other small mammals and birds.
Once it was a common small predator found throughout the Midwest of the continent, but was persecuted and destroyed because it unfortunately developed a taste for chickens and other small livestock. It was poisoned and trapped and extirpated from the majority of its former range. Small remnant populations have clung on enjoying the protection they have found in state and national parks.
I watched this River Cat for several minutes before it discovered me! It wasn’t sure what I was and it jumped up onto a large log for a better look. At this point, I wasn’t sure what it was going to do…but I kept on taking pictures. Here is a close up of its head which illustrates one peculiarity about this beast.
River Cats have mismatched eyes. There is an old pioneer wives’ tale that the secret to this cat’s hunting success lies in locking its gaze with that of its prey’s. In effect, it momentarily hypnotizes its quarry before coming in to make the kill. Whether or not there is any paralyzing effect at all has never been formally proven.
Once this unusual cat discovered that I was neither food nor threat it moved on. I tagged behind at a respectful distance. I followed it near the river before it gave me the slip. Knowing that it was probably hungry, the thought crossed my mind that it might try to ambush one of the wading birds I saw earlier. Picking up my collecting bag and walking stick I headed back down to the river. Unfortunately, my luck didn’t hold out and I wasn’t treated to a real life moment where hunter meets prey. I never saw the River Cat again, but I do have a few photos to prove it was here.
It’s so incredible to see all the herons!!! You styro man reminds me of my father from way back in the 60’s. River cat looks like it’s part Siamese! 😀
Thanks for your nice comment. It seems so much of my art’s power stems from its suggestibility. What you see in it says something about you too!
Herons and River Cats–Oh My!
Hi Al.
I find it very interesting when you share both the positive and negative evidence of others’ interactions with your creations. Makes one wonder just what makes some folks ‘tick,’ doesn’t it?
You’re certainly on a quest all your own.
🙂
We too have heat of 100 plus variety and NO rain in sight. After last summer’s go round with extreme heat I can’t tolerate it. I ‘refresh’ the tiny bird beach of shallow pan on kiddie picnic table early in the morning and basically retreat inside in order to keep breathing myself. LOL. Though I have been ‘trained’ by the resident robin to tun on the hose in the front yard at regular intervals instead of waiting for when it starts poking its beak inside for H2O.
Do be safe out there along the river–water, hat, rest, shade–you know the drill.
I’m really into the art-making idea as part of what makes some folks tick. As living beings we all have choices to make from moment to moment. It is interesting the kinds of decisions people make. I show both the positive and the negative interactions people have with my art as a way of illustrating those poles. I have a feeling that this is going to be a long, very hot summer. More and more I hear people around me and in the media attributing all the adverse weather we have been experiencing to climate change. It seems people are starting to wrap their minds around that concept…better late than never?
Stopping by, Al, to take in a couple of posts and see if you are river arting in all this heat. You are truly dedicated. I like that idea of the herons cooling their feet, too. If truth be known, we have learned it from them. Excellent post, as always.
Thanks Leslie…your comments and support are appreciated! I do think of myself as being “dedicated” and this recent heat wave has tested this. That dedication comes from my “need” to be creative and a “drive” to make stuff which seems to be growing stronger as I grow older and develop particular points of view I want to share.
It is so stinking hot and dry. I admire your endurance to suffer through the heat, flies and skeeters. I enjoyed this post 🙂
Thanks Rose…I have been thinking of you and wondering how your summer is going in all this heat? When I’m engaged with my art or just enjoying nature…that has a way of putting my mind in other places where I can set aside my immediate discomforts.