Hiatus

Ducks and geese on the water at sunset (179_7932)

The Kids and I are riding into the sunset for the immediate future.  That is to say we’re taking a brief hiatus from blogging.

“NOOOOO!!!!” you scream in response.

Calm down, drama queens.  It won’t last that long.

For your information, we’re only talking days, not weeks.

“How many days?” you demand vehemently.

A few.  Perhaps several.  But less than eleven.

And you weep, “Why?”

Because we’ve been going for more than four years and feel we deserve—let alone need—a break.  It’s only a brief respite, a mere sip from the well of rest from which we’ve for too long abstained.

During this time off, there will be no Random Thoughts and no Vocabularium entries.  As a matter of fact, there will be absolutely nothing.  No new content.  No photos.  No videos.  Nada.

As in nada damn thing.

See, I made a funny.

The point is we need a vacation from the blog.  We’ve grown tired, stressed from the continual grind, weary as it were.

But this isn’t forever.  It’s for some number of days not to number more than ten.  That’s barely more than a week if it even lasts that long.

I promise we’ll be back.

During this time we’ll be snapping photos, capturing videos, recharging our batteries, and enjoying a retreat from the digital mayhem that is online journaling.

So we’ll see you in no more than ten days.

Ducks and geese on the water at sunset (179_7942)

[photos include mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos), American coots (Fulica americana), brown and white Chinese geese (a.k.a. swan geese, Anser cygnoides), wood ducks (Aix sponsa), unknown duck species, and perhaps a few creatures I couldn’t recognize in these particular images]

The majestic approach

I’ve often wondered about the “swan geese” moniker given to Chinese geese (Anser cygnoides).  Sure, they’re as large as swans and have long necks they sometimes hold in positions reminiscent of swans, but I didn’t particularly feel either of those traits warranted a nickname linking these raucous birds to their distant cousins who quite dissimilarly are full of grace and quite a bit less noise.  I realize they are domesticated swan geese, but that still leaves me wondering about the name.

And then I captured these photos of both the brown and white varieties.  The question was answered.

Watching these large waterfowl as they glided across the surface of the water, their heads held with courtly elegance, their necks long and slender, and their wings pushed up by an upwardly held tail, suddenly reminded me of the same postures and visuals often seen with swans.  Although no one would ever mistake one of these geese for a swan (unless seen from quite a distance), I realized while watching them approach the shore that they indeed deserved that very cognomen.

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Even the American coots (Fulica americana) seemed to offer genteel deference as the geese made their way toward land quite near where I stood.  Then again, maybe they were just trying to get out of the way of this much larger and quite forbidding gaggle that seemed intent on mowing over anything that got in their way.  That definitely is another similarity to swans (who, if you didn’t know, can be quite mean and aggressive, a trait contrary to their beauty).

Nevertheless, the geese came ashore only a few yards (a few meters) from where I stood taking photographs.  Until they were out of the water, one easily could see how swanlike they were.

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Let’s not forget they are geese, however.  Before they reached my position, I captured this video showing just how rowdy, boisterous, and shrill they are.  The honking echoed across the entire lake and sometimes threatened to reach earsplitting levels.  Just listen to them in this brief film.


There’s something else in that video I want you to take note of as well.  Underlying the sounds of the geese and other birds is an almost mournful noise, one in close proximity to the camera.  It runs throughout the video and repeats constantly and at almost clock-like intervals.

That sound is a coot standing in the shallows.  I had never heard a coot make that noise before.  I’ve heard the other sound they make, the one that reminds me of a throaty groan (you can hear it a few times in the first five seconds, and then there’s one right at five seconds that’s much louder and clearer).

I watched the coot making that sorrowful sound to see if perhaps it was hurt or sick.  After several minutes, I concluded it was acting like the rest of them who were loitering about the area where land and water joined together.  Despite its kith and kin making what I thought to be normal coot noises, this one continued its crying for quite a while.  Eventually, though, it reverted to the expected calling as it and the other coots made their way to land for a free meal provided by some very nice folks bearing the gift of breakfast.

The coming splendor

Geese, ducks, doves, and other birds against the backdrop of Sunset Bay (145_4584)
Geese, ducks, doves, and other birds against the backdrop of Sunset Bay (146_4627)

nature’s abounding with beauty so rare
she’s giving birth everywhere
richness of color and texture in form
simple or finely adorned

meadows moist, so luscious and greening
petals reaching, blossoming
cricket, locust, mockingbird singing
while every leaf is glistening

for brilliance of stars and brightness of skies
feathers so graceful in flight
thunder and lightning and wetness of rain
seasons—the unbroken chain

dusty dunes undulating, dancing
while restless winds go wandering
toad, chameleon, spider parading
while a torrid sun is simmering

may we live aware of her beauty
caring for the least of these
and always seek to share in the bounty
that she gives so graciously

My favorite tree (146_4658)
Geese, ducks, doves, and other birds against the backdrop of White Rock Lake (146_4618)

[the text above is from a song; I can’t find any trace of who it’s by, but I remember it from decades ago; I had the lyrics written down in one of my journals from childhood, a reminder of what mattered to me then and still matters to me now, and my own ramblings were carefully wrapped around this block of text; if anyone recognizes the words and can tell me what the song is, who sang it, or anything else about it, I’d be very grateful; on another note, all of these photos were taken last summer in Sunset Bay at White Rock Lake; that happens to be one of my favorite spots; the pier you see on the right in the first photo is the one I visit often; similarly, I was sitting under my favorite tree when I took that picture, and that’s also whose branches you see in the third photo; wildlife shown: American coots (Fulica americana), mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos), brown Chinese geese (a.k.a. swan geese, Anser cygnoides), great-tailed grackles (Quiscalus mexicanus), rock doves (Columba livia), and perhaps a few I missed or couldn’t identify]

Last one in’s a rotten egg

Last June as summer temperatures danced around the century mark, even the cool waters of the lake offered little reprieve from the simmering sun.  It was therefore quite entertaining to watch some of the local waterfowl as they struggled with the idea of getting in the water or finding shade.

A slew of geese and ducks began making their way toward the water’s edge.

Ducks and geese leaving the shade as they walk toward the lake

Amazingly, their headlong charge halted the moment they stepped out of the shade and into the hot sunshine.

Ducks and geese leaving the shade as they walk toward the lake

As if confused by the throng’s forward momentum as opposed to the sudden onslaught of Texas’ oppressive heat, their hesitation soon turned to milling about at the boundary that defined relief under the trees versus attack by unending fire from the sky.  Even those who had already entered the water failed to stray far from the shore as they too looked back with a certain longing on their faces.

Ducks and geese hesitating to leave the shade for the lake's cool water

Finally, perhaps in response to an unspoken consensus, everyone returned to the shade, found a comfortable spot to rest, and nestled in hoping to wait out the sweltering afternoon.

Ducks and geese returning to the shade and lying down for an afternoon nap

I found it all rather entertaining to watch the internal struggle take place as each bird realized the lake couldn’t offer what was available in the shade.

[photos include mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos), brown Chinese geese (a.k.a. swan geese, Anser cygnoides), an American coot (Fulica americana), an eastern fox squirrel (Sciurus niger), and some duck species I can’t yet identify]

Remember when it was warm?

I began pondering warm weather as I searched through my collection of photos for a nature post.  You see, it’s been cold here in North Texas for the last few days, and warm before that, and cold before that, and so on ad nauseam since autumn last year.  No surprises lie beneath the surface of our on-again off-again winter.  In fact, that’s quite normal ’round these parts.

Nevertheless, I stood on the patio a few moments ago with brisk cool winds embracing me while warm sunshine rained down from above, and in that moment I wondered to myself how much longer winter’s grasp could restrain Texas’ oppressive heat.  It would soon return, I feared.

Yet that instance of consideration aided me in finding just the right photos to post.

These pictures are from last summer.  I can tell you the heat and humidity were both quite overwhelming at the time I captured these shots in June 2006.  I wore shorts and a tank top as I sauntered around the lake, yet the dearth of clothing failed to provide any relief from scorching temperatures and stifling moisture filling the air.  It was hot.  Damn hot, in fact.  Part of that stemmed from a muggy atmosphere dripping with water vapor.  You could feel it wrap around your body like warm wet cotton the moment you stepped out the door.

Despite the meteorological obstacles, however, I enjoyed a rather placid early afternoon with the various forms of life that inhabit the world wherein I live.

One such creature, a great egret (Ardea alba), strolled along the shore of White Rock’s Sunset Bay.  The snowy white bird gave no thought to the laundry list of waterfowl sharing its domain.

A great egret (Ardea alba) strolling along the shore while a mallard drake (Anas platyrhynchos) stands camouflaged on land

Did you notice the mallard drake (Anas platyrhynchos) perfectly camouflaged in the grass?  I didn’t notice him until I processed the photo for posting.  His plumage blends in well with the shore, don’t you think?

My gaze continued to follow the egret as it made its way no more than three feet (a meter) from the shore, tall lanky legs carefully lifted and set down in shallows to carry it onward.  I suspected it was heading toward the confluence of several major tributaries that feed the lake, what normally presents as a good feeding ground for such predators.

While it walked, many other aquatic birds made their way toward solid ground… and shade.  Yet the egret never paused when navigating around white and brown Chinese geese (a.k.a. swan geese, Anser cygnoides) and mallard ducks jockeying for first rights to the best cool spots.

A great egret (Ardea alba) strolling along the shore while mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) and Chinese geese (Anser cygnoides) make their way toward land

When finally the time came for the egret to enter the cove, it was not alone.  A great blue heron (Ardea herodias) stealthily haunted the area.  In fact, I watched the heron for some time and found it amazing that the winged beast hardly moved at all.  Its head looked this way and that, its eyes, I’m sure, fixed on one thing or another in the meantime, yet it stood motionless, a statue carved from feathers and firmly positioned in a stoic stance.  Much unlike the egret’s constant motion, the heron seemed impermeable to all stimuli save whatever ran through its avian brain.

A great egret (Ardea alba) walking in the shallows as a great blue heron (Ardea herodias) stands motionless

Each of these temporal tidbits forever captured in digital amber remind me of what is to come as we move rapidly away from winter and toward spring, then summer, and finally autumn again… only to revisit winter in less than a year.  Between now and the first cold snap wherein we Texans find ourselves considering what arctic invader has visited our lands, we will see a menagerie of weather that has boggled the minds of scientists and non-scientists alike for more centuries than can be counted.  Our geographic position offers us some of the most robust meteorological swings and extremes as can be found on our little planet.  And I’d want it no other way.

[Update] I have since identified the white duck in the center of the second image as a pekin duck (a.k.a. domestic duck, white pekin duck, or Long Island duck; Anas domesticus).