[all mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos); it was the height of a summer afternoon and they were all looking for a spot of shade in which to rest; you can see how many of them were already under the tree in the background]
Category Archives: Nature Photos
Dying alone redux
[I’m such an idiot; I wrote the original Dying alone intending to post it with the photos seen in this post; now more than four months later, I’ve only just realized I never posted the photos; oops; the text below is a minor rewrite of the original post; all photos are of the same male cicada-killer wasp (Sphecius speciosus) taken over the course of two days; I couldn’t find him on the third day or any day that followed it and could only assume his time had ended]
He is the last of his kind. I wonder if he at all realizes that in the vastness of his universe that encompasses such a small part of my own, he is utterly and completely without a clan. It is a wretched curse for one so small.
He stands guard ready to challenge other males of his species. There will be no such challenges for there are no other males. He is the sole remaining example of these gargantuans. Diligent in his resolve to protect his space from enemies, those enemies will never come. He is the lone sentry from a generation of sentries that already perished.
He hopes to propagate his species, to continue the family line with available females. There are no such females. The last one died earlier today. If he did not mate before then, he will never have another opportunity. His lifetime is now one of aloneness.
He protects the now sleeping children, the last traces of his generation, and the offspring of his colony. They are children he will never know and will never see. Safely entombed in the ground, they will sleep for a year before taking up the dance he alone dances. These children will never know their parents as these parents will never know their children, and yet he does not waver in his resolve.
He is the last bastion of a dying race whose hopes rest solely in the ground he surveys from time to time as he answers his own genetic programming by still giving chase to anything that floats or flies by him. Because there are no others, he wrestles only with time as he awaits his own end.
There are no witnesses save himself who know of the life and death struggle of his kin, the members of this vast settlement who have already expended what little time they had on this planet. With so many burrows scattered about, one can only hope he shared in the brief tumult that is their existence. He will never have another chance.
He is heartbreakingly alone now. There will be no others before he dies. The purpose of his life can no longer be fulfilled, so he stands on his own waiting for death to embrace him. He will die alone much unlike the rest of his kind; instead, they faced death in the company of others, something he can only dream of.
Watching him patrol a territory now devoid of his species, I wonder if he is lonely. Perhaps I am projecting human emotions onto this creature. Perhaps. One cannot help but feel isolation and solitude when looking at him. I sit and watch him as we both bake in the simmering heat and unending sunshine of a Texas summer. Part of me wishes I could help him in some way, make him feel that his final days are not unnoticed, help him see the promise of progeny tucked away all around us.
But I cannot tell him such things just as I cannot make him comprehend the magnitude of the situation. He must face this on his own.
Seeing his last days in the barren landscape that once gave rise to a great many of his siblings causes me to feel for him insomuch as his last moments will be solitary. I do not know how much longer he can survive, but I do know he will spend these final days waiting for death, and the wait will stand upon its emptiness, and when death finally comes, he will face it here in this place where so many have already come and gone before, this place where he must already understand to some small degree that he is by himself.
He watches me as I watch him. I am now able to get close enough that I can see his head moving to follow my actions. A part of me weeps for him. It was only a few weeks ago that the air and ground all about me were filled with these goliaths. It was only a few days ago that others of his kind still came and went. It was just yesterday that the last remaining female arrived to finalize her nest, her hope for future generations, before she finally left never again to return alive but instead to be discovered by me near her burrow with all the life drained from her body.
And now he is alone. Alone waiting for his own death. It is the same unstoppable end responsible for wiping out everyone he ever knew. He is alone. Just alone. And that is how he will die.
He is the last of his kind.
You look like you could use an opossum
You’ll have to pardon the quality of the photos since it was early morning and the contrast of the bright sky and dark foliage didn’t make it easy to take photos without washing out all the details with the flash.
This juvenile opossum ran into the tree when I walked outside. At first, it was way back in the middle of the tree.
After I stood quiet and still for several minutes with the camera held in front of me, the little rascal began to work its way toward me.
Eventually, it worked its way to the closest limb where it could take a close look at me. When I didn’t pounce, it then climbed down and left.
[need I mention creepy little hands? and check out the difference between the front and rear paws as is especially evident in the last photo…]
The shadow tree
Yet another photo of my favorite tree…
The inexplicable shadows that animate this creature always are most apparent when it holds its limbs high in feeble defiance of the penetrating sun. Even as I hide below in what shelter it offers, I see it weakening beneath simmering heat and piercing light that threatens to consume us both. Sweat forms on my brow as the star’s essence laps at us with burning tongues of fire. With my hand held high to shield my eyes, the great tree strains against its own weight and the unwinnable fight brought to us by a relentless foe. Finally, as rays of stinging brightness filter down through its cloak and strike at me where I stand, the tree succumbs to the strain of it all and acquiesces its shelter. I am left heartbroken to see such an ancient creature conquered so easily when it wanted nothing more than to keep its shadows. I offer it the paltry gratitude that fills my pockets and assure it I have no other offering, and I briefly touch it in a show of camaraderie that we two, this tree and I, stand together despite the heat’s triumph. Subtly and so quickly that it’s over before I realize it’s begun, I feel the tree shudder beneath my open hand and hear its weak yet appreciative voice that is felt more through my feet than heard through my ears. We understand each other, I think, at least to some small degree, and I am, for that brief moment, more than I have ever been before. I am…
The gentle tree
Another photo of my favorite tree…
I sat beneath its branches and leaves as though owed the shade it provided. Groans of wood too heavy to endure the onslaught of the ever-blowing wind filled my ears and declared this ancient life was weary for enduring its own weight. It had carried that burden for countless years yet bellowed its own fatigue. Foliage rustled in the breeze like a symphonic orchestra of nature against nature, the expression of passing force against near-immovable existence.
I took shelter there and enjoyed the brief respite from the simmering sun. All manner of wildlife lay before me. Ducks and geese and squirrels and herons and egrets and an infinite demonstration of diversity danced before my eyes, and I relaxed in the shadow provided by this being older than any I’d ever known before. While restless winds wandered about me and my friend as it held its plumage out in offering to all who would come, the briefest of sounds drew my attention upward. There resting on one of many appendages swaying in the wind was a male great-tailed grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus). It perched so near me that I felt its presence as much as I sensed it with my eyes and ears. It shared with me a moment in this place.
Yet I could not help but wonder if these two souls—one winged and vocal, the other stoic and silent—if these two expressions of life were not in fact conspiring to watch me there beneath their gazes, watching me huddled quietly at the base of a timeless spirit as a master of the sky held its place and monitored me. Such spry freedom, that bird, and freely demonstrating its superiority by flitting from branch to branch until it rested just above me, its eyes ever watchful and persistent, its eyes so clear and near I had no doubt it observed me with complete confidence of its own safety.
I continued snapping photos of nature’s splendor displayed before me. Nevertheless, at no time was I unaware of two lives in balance as one held me upright and the other watched. Cursory glances toward the sky continued revealing my two companions, one seen only in silhouette while the other filled my vision. Both looked down upon me and the world at large. Our three lives were, for even the briefest of moments, joined together as one.