The Falls of the Ohio State Park has experienced its first light frost. With the colder temperatures arriving, a maturing autumn anticipates the winter to come. Although there are still some leaves left on the black willows and cottonwood trees…they won’t last much longer. Already the curled up, shed leaves of the willows are gathering and forming brown islands around the parent trees and defining the spaces the willows occupy in this sandy area near the river. As I walk through this habitat, cocklebur and various other seeds attach themselves to my jeans and shoe laces. Picking and rubbing off the various prickly and sticky hitchhikers, it’s amuses me to think of myself as an agent of seed dispersal!
A circular grass ball lying on the ground catches my eye. Picking up the object I discover an intact bird nest. Did it dislodge from some fork of a tree branch or is this from a ground nesting species? I marvel at its construction and note its exterior is made from dried, interwoven grasses which contrasts with the well-defined interior composed of tiny twigs and rootlets that give structural strength to the bowl. I wonder which species created it and were they successful in raising offspring? The nest is now spent like the willow leaves and I place it on the ground to be reclaimed by nature.
Along my walk, I find various mushrooms and fungi growing on the decomposing driftwood. I admire the variety of forms present. Although the notion of decay hardly sounds optimistic…in this instance it is. The fungi are great recyclers and return needed nutrients back into the environment. These mushrooms are not lesser than, but rather co-equal to the many other interesting life forms that make this place their home. I come across other signs of life along my hike.
There are still a few butterflies around like this Comma. Although nectar from flowers is absent, there are still what I call “butterfly licks” on a few of the willow trees. These licks are sweet spots along the trunk or branches where the tree exudes a sticky sap that attracts insects. With its wings folded upright, this Comma looks much like a dried leaf itself. There is a good chance this butterfly will hibernate and overwinter here before “passing the torch” to the next generation of Comma butterflies in the spring.
Along the riverbank, I find lots of evidence that beaver have been in the area. They have been feeding off the willow trees growing nearest to the water. Beaver are very wary and are probably active at night or very early in the morning. In all my years walking throughout the park, I have only seen them on a couple of occasions. The photo above shows a willow branch that has been gnawed away from the tree and its bark has been nibbled off for food. Their teeth leave “tool marks” on the creamy, ivory-colored wood. By the end of today’s hike, I have collected a nice bundle of beaver chewed sticks to use in my art. And speaking of art…I walked by a couple of projects I worked on in my previous post. The rock ring in the water is still holding up, however, the “Silver Star” made from overlaying driftwood lengths in the sand is a shadow of its former self. Here are a few before and after images.
It’s a big difference and doesn’t appear to be the result of natural wear and tear…unless we accept that there is a naturally destructive side to man’s nature? Of course, this is just a pile of sticks arranged in the sand, but on a much larger, planetary level can we say that the wholesale changes we are making to the environment are natural and inevitable? I’m in the “no” camp because another aspect of our complex natures is the ability to discern right from wrong. Still I wonder when our instincts for self-preservation will start kicking in? I was beginning to mull this over more when I heard what sounded like someone playing strange music from an unfamiliar instrument. I was pretty sure my ears weren’t hearing things and so I walked around until I found its source. You can imagine my deep surprise when I came upon this interesting character in the willow habitat.
He introduced himself as the “Giggle Master” and he said he heard me talking to myself about serious things and grew concerned. His method of revealing himself was to play a tune of his own composition from this combination oboe/recorder that grew from the middle of his face! By breathing in and out and working the finger holes on his instrument he could produce a variety of sounds some of which were quite unique and appealing. When I had adjusted to the idea that a strange being about a foot or 20 or so centimeters tall was talking to me…I relaxed my guard and decided to see what would happen next? The Giggle Master told me to follow him and that he had something to show me that he believed would lighten my mood up considerably.
I followed my new friend to his shelter under a willow tree and he introduced me to his “collection”. Like me, the Giggle Master is a finder and collector of odd river-deposited items. He said it gave him great joy to assemble various odd collections where the sum of the collection is greater and more interesting than the parts. I understood this perfectly because I have many unusual collections of my own river junk. Some of which have been presented in this blog like my Squirt Gun Collection or Collection of Fake Foods. You can see other collections I’ve formed and appear in my Pages section.. I have to say that the collection my friend was presenting to me was indeed unusual. I asked what he called it and would it be possible to photograph it and present it to the wider world? He said that he had no objections and so without further ado…here is what my friend called “The Giggle Bowl”.
We moved to the fossil beds for our impromptu photo shoot. The Giggle Master told me that he had been collecting these “smiley faces” for a few years and now had enough to fill a found plastic bowl. He went on to say that although he recognized that this was mostly waste plastic with all the accompanying bad baggage…it was also important to be able to step back and just appreciate the absurdity of it all. The Giggle Master told me that taking oneself too seriously has potential consequences of its own. He also told me that maintaining a healthy sense of humor would balance out the dark moods and I began to see the wisdom in this. The Giggle Master said that he was appearing to me now because through some sixth sense all his own he could tell my own thoughts and feelings were beginning to sink below the horizon line. He believed every person’s well-being would benefit from having a good laugh. I have to admit it worked on me! Okay, let’s spill the bowl and take a closer look at this goofy collection.
Okay, I confess that I have no idea what or how these smiley faces were used? In their mouths, they have what look to be squeakers, however, these balls are too hard to squeeze. The one with the red cap has a small stone lodged in its mouth and was made in China.
I frequently am grateful when something I come across says what it is. In this case, these are three lightweight foam “antenna balls”. Yes, for a while, there was a fad where people decorated the ends of their cars’ radio antennas with these novelties. I like the one sporting a jester’s cap.
I’m calling these simply “face balls” because they are obviously not the more traditional “smiley faces”. They floated into the park via the Ohio River from parts unknown.
The Giggle Master was slightly alarmed because he realized he is missing the third smiling face from this series of objects. I recognized that these are fishing floats and the missing float is larger still. It will turn up somewhere.
Here’s a trio of smiling faces. The yellow one in the center is a simple ball, but the top and bottom pieces belong to something else I don’t recognize…do you? The top piece looks to be a tiny container and maybe once held candy or soap-bubble solution, but there is no other information about it including its country of origin.
After the photo session was over, we returned to the willow tree where I first met the Giggle Master. He stored his collection in a hollow formed in the tree’s trunk. Before departing from my new friend, I thanked him for the much-needed laugh and wished him happy hunting as he expanded his silly collection. No doubt the river will continue to supply new items. He replied with a few notes from his…”nose instrument’. As I turned for home, I looked back one last time and could discern a slight smile on his tiny face. Until next time from the Falls of the Ohio.
A most pleasant journey, Thank You for taking us along. The nature observations, both photos and dialogue were therapeutic, relaxing, offering a sense of serenity helping us to step outside ourselves.
Then as we pulled back to our own being and thoughts and feelings, great balls of smiles flooded in to shore up our delicate souls.
Thank You for sharing your stop, look, and listen walk.
Thank You for raising smiles, even laughter reminding us the seed for joy no matter how deeply buried, is always in our hearts-all we have to do to bring it out is add a bit of nourishment or starter feed.
🙂 🙂 🙂 :
Bernie
Thanks Bernie…I really appreciate your wonderful comment! It’s all about eliciting a sense of wonder for the world.
Another compelling and humorous tale! It is easy to get depressed about the state of the world, so having a sense of the ridiculous is important. Your story really emphasised for me a point that the free marketeers and the economic growth fetishists always seem to ignore. That is, that a lot of economic activity that uses energy and creates waste produces no real benefit to society yet creates massive damage to the environment. Would we really be in any way impoverished if smiley faces that go on the ends of antennae didn’t exist? Or for that matter any of the useless knick knacks that fill shops (and our homes)? Sometimes I think I should just be a nihilist…after all, we could be living in perfect harmony with nature, and an asteroid could wipe everything out, as it has done before. What the heck, maybe I should go down to the $2 store and buy myself a smiley face ball!
Hi Julie…You understand the conundrum we all face and why this post arcs from the natural to the absurd. Of course we don’t need plastic “smiley faces”, but could probably get by with ones that at least will biodegrade. Your point about “economic growth” is well taken. It is interesting how often biological terms like “growth” or “evolution” are applied to economics. The reality is that these two fields don’t correspond all that easily. The waste products created from our “growth” will poison us out of existence before we have exhausted all the nutrients in our petri dish of a planet. The Falls of the Ohio is a compelling place for me because it does provide evidence of an alternate reality millions of years a go (the highpoint of life as it existed then) where soberly, most life forms hit an extinction cycle wall that took many more millions of years to recover from. That fact is always quietly present in the many projects I do out here on the fossil beds. This is such a deep subject that you do need some humor involved just to get the conversation started. Thanks for your excellent comment!
I echo Julie in that so many people see the river as a muted toned, pleasant environment in which to relax, but because you’re able to utilize its offerings into “journeys and tales”, you create a whole ‘nother world where happiness is alive and well. It’s like a fantasy place! What’s interesting also is that after seeing so many of your works made from driftwood, “trash” (and I use that word lightly! heheh) and other environmental elements, its surprising to return to the river afterwards, where in my mind, I’m half expecting to find your friendly smiling bobbers and art pieces. Instead, it’s quiet and uneventful so it brings to my attention just how much of your stories and personalities really is “you”. You bring life to this ole place. :0) I love those bobbers! I plan on spending a whole lot more time down at the river in the spring ans summer of 2015, now that I’m taking some time off from school and I can’t wait!
Thanks for the nice comment. I do try to bring this place to life in my own way while leaving a minimal footprint in the park.