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Archive for the ‘birding’ Category

plug at the bottom of the river, 5/09

Sunday was absolutely glorious and the river level had dropped as quickly as it had risen.  My youngest son Adam came with me today and we shared an adventure in exploring and creating art.  After the river goes down, it’s always fun to see how the landscape has been changed and what new stuff has washed up.  Here’s an image of Adam and the “giant plug from the bottom of the river”.  The air was full of cottonwood fluff and birds were everywhere.  Saw two more new species for me, the Red-eyed Vireo and the Black-throated Green Warbler.  Both are supposedly common species, but you would be surprised at how little they show themselves.

Adam, sand drawing, 5/09

Adam is the artist in the family and has an amazing ability to focus on projects when he wants to.  Lately, he has been on an extended Godzilla, King  of the Monsters kick.  He collects the action figures and watches the movies and makes all kinds of art based on the characters and story lines.  Today he started things off with a sand drawing.

Adam and Godzilla figure, 5/09

He has seen me make stuff from Styrofoam for years and naturally he has to try his hand at it too.  We call these small sculptures “Foamies” and here is his Godzilla…now in three dimensions.  It’s made from polystyrene, sticks, and nuts.  I helped where the use of a knife was needed.  Adam’s older brother, Michael used to come out with me when he was younger and we would have similar adventures making things.  It’s important to bring your kids outdoors if you ever expect them to develop a love for it.

Time Keeper w/rope, 5/09

Adam wasn’t the only one enjoying himself!  I gathered materials and made this figure I called the “Time Keeper” based on the plastic clock filled with water hanging around his neck.  The riverbank is still muddy in places.  If you are not careful you can walk right out of your stuck in the mud shoes.  The first photos I took of this figure were by this barge rope.  I’m not sure what the blue material its body is composed of, but it’s not true polystyrene foam.  I was able to locate many of the larger pieces I had put away for safe keeping…the river did move them, but not far away.

Time Keeper, final location, 5/09

This is where I left the “Time Keeper”.  I wonder when I next return to the Falls if he will still be there?  His body was water-logged and he needs to dry out a bit.  He’s in the Willow Habitat by the fixed wier dam.  The coming week promises a few good days and we shall see!

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Steve 5/09

My apologies to the ladies on the left who’s names I don’t know, but the guy on the right is “Steve”.  I had met “Steve” once before, last year, on the park’s western most border where fewer people go.  I was scouting a location for making a sculpture and he was knapping a projectile point out of glass.  On the riverbank, there is this “hail fellow well met’ attitude and so neither of us knows the other’s last name…as if that were important.  Today I was looking for birds and came across “Steve” waiting for a friend near the Interpretive Center.  We recognized each other and struck up a pretty good conversation.  Seems we have a lot in common.  We both grew up as military brats and our love for nature first developed in the woods of Europe.  We also share this idea that many of the ills of the world could be reduced if people would reconnect with their own innate creativity.  There is a feeling of accomplishment in being able to use your hands to make something.  That’s why “Steve” knaps projectile points.  Every one he makes is different.  You need to know and study your material, be it flint or glass, and plan how you are going to approach making the form you imagine in the matrix.  On the surface of the picnic table we were sharing he showed me some of the points he had made.

Steve's points, 5/09

Most are made from local rock and flint found in Harrison County, Indiana.  I like the ones made from plate glass and Milk of Magnesia bottles among other river-given glass.  “Steve” also makes walking sticks and collects morel mushrooms for sale.  He also admits that despite being “residentially challenged” he leads a pretty rich life.  “Being 56 years old, nobody’s going to hire me.”  We talked about stuff I do.  How he has found several of my pieces in remote places.  We talked about birds and how he collected bird’s eggs in England when he was a kid. 

male Northern Oriole singing, 5/08

“Steve” asked me if I could identify the song an oriole makes when I hear one?  And on cue, one unseen in the woods behind us called out.  This picture of one of last year’s Northern Orioles (formerly Baltimore Oriole) is for “Steve” because he brought me luck.  We were talking when the Summer Tanager from my last post appeared.  I went off into the woods chasing beautiful birds and breathing in the perfume of blooming honey locusts.  This time of year one of my favorite flowering vines is in bloom and I associate it with the orioles.  It’s real name escapes me, but I call it yellow trumpet creeper…does anybody out there know what it’s called?  I’m sure I will see “Steve” again…we are alike in that we are drawn to the river.

yellow trumpet creeper vine, 5/09

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