I wrote this as
a newspaper column about ten years ago, and several readers commented that they
liked it then. So I will send it out again in hopes that new readers like it as
well, with the knowledge that old readers like me don’t remember it.
There won't be
any New Year’s Eve party here on Lightnin' Ridge. Things will be about like
they are almost every night. Before midnight, a pair of raccoons will be
ambling along the small creek that leads down to the river, looking for food
that is becoming harder to find because the crawdads are in deep water and the
frogs are buried in the mud, just as it has been for hundreds and hundreds of
years.
A great horned
owl will leave his perch at the edge of the meadow and sweep down upon an
unsuspecting deer mouse without a sound other than the rustling in the grass
when he pins it against the cold earth with sharp talons. A great horned owl’s
wings still make no noise, just as it has been for who knows how long. Unfortunately
for the mouse, he won’t live to see the new year, but he doesn’t even know that
there is one coming. He didn’t see the coming of the last one. He has lived
only 10 months, and that’s a long time for a mouse. The field where he has
lived is a home for dozens of field mice, voles, cotton rats, and shrews;
nearly a dozen species of small ground mammals, some of which spend the entire
winter beneath ground in hibernation. Fortunately for the owl, and other
predators, there are some species of small mammals that do not hibernate, but
remain active throughout the winter or at least much of it.
Inside the big
oak where the owl sat, a pair of fox squirrels sleep in a small, protected
cavity. They will miss the dawning of a new day and a new year if the
temperature is well below freezing for a good while. Squirrels do not hibernate
throughout the winter, but in periods of extended extreme cold, they will sleep
for days, in a semi-hibernation much like the raccoon, the skunk and the
opossum.
There are some
big sycamores along the bluff over the creek, and several wild gobblers spend
the eve of the new year asleep on their branches, their forms plainly visible
in the moonlight. Three are big old toms, but there are five jakes, which have
never experienced a new year’s eve before. They sleep through it, with
tightened tendons in their legs securing their toes to the limbs of the
sycamore like the grasp of a vice. Their ancestors weathered the passing of
hundreds of new years in much the same way. Change is not clamored for amongst
wild creatures. It is a resistance to change that ensures survival of the
species. It is sameness that gives security in wild places.
In a cedar
thicket, buried in the grasses, a covey of bobwhites form a ring, ten of them
in all. There were nearly twice as many in November. The new year brings little for them to celebrate. With their
bodies huddled together, warmth is passed to the weaker members of the covey by
the stronger and they preserve heat as feathers fluff and insulate. When there
are too few and the temperature plunges, there is less chance of survival. As
the new year begins, smaller groups find birds of another covey and join them,
in greater numbers finding greater strength to resist the cold.
Huddled beneath
the cedar, they are unaware of the grey fox, which passes as the new year
approaches. His is an eternal quest for food, and if he only knew they were
there, what a New Year’s Eve party he would have. But like the owl, he will settle for a few small ground
mammals on this final night of an old year.
A half dozen
mallards spring to flight as a bobcat streaks across the river gravel bar where
they rest, upstream from the mouth of the creek. He leaps high to grasp a
slower member of the flock with his forepaws and pulls her down, taking that
weaker, slower individual for a new year’s feast. The hen mallard is a
substantial meal for the bobcat. The rest of the flock circles in the moonlight
and will settle into another hole of water upstream.
The last
protests of the quacking hen breaks the stillness, but other sounds of nature
at midnight are subtle. A buck snorts from a cedar thicket above the creek. A dying rabbit shrieks from the field
across the river, as a mink ferrets him from a brush pile. Smaller than the
rabbit, the mink can go anywhere, and he wraps his body around the cottontail’s
neck and hangs on, his teeth buried in the soft fur as the life and death
struggle which marks the beginning of a new year is just as it has always been.
Here where the
creek joins the river, where the woodland breaks into meadow, where thickets of
briar and cedar stand as they have since men first came to change and scar the
land....life goes on. There is no celebration. It is only the passing of
another night, the coming of another day.
And I know that
for some it is necessary on this night to group together and make much of the
ticking of a clock, where alcohol flows and the noise grows to a blaring crescendo.
But I’ll walk that quiet wooded
ridge above the creek at midnight, and treasure the silence, listening for
little more than the distant yodel of a coyote. I’ll survey the river bottoms
in the moonlight and be thankful for the stability of unchanging nature...wild
creatures living as they always have, evidence of God’s unchanging laws which
even man will eventually answer to.
There is
perfection here...thank God we haven’t ruined it all. We will in time, I
suppose. These mushrooming numbers of human beings will destroy it all
eventually. But maybe not this year… On this little Ozark ridge-top, there is
life continuing as it always has. There’s nothing special here at midnight, no
observance of anything different or new. And I will not celebrate the coming of a new year while I
linger there. I will mourn the passing of the old one. I draw nearer each eve
of a new year, to the year which will be my last.
It has been a good
year, one to give thanks for. None of us are guaranteed there will be another
one. This quiet wooded ridge overlooking the moonlit river, is a good place to
ask the Creator to allow us all to enjoy one more year, to ask that the coming
year be a good one as well.... a year wherein wild things and wild places
continue to exist.
I could wish
you a happy new year but wishing it for you will not make it happen. We should
pray for each other’s good health, and work together to make the coming year a
good year for the neighbors, friends and family that we know and love.
In living our
lives with others in mind, we create happiness for ourselves. If you have seen
many years pass, you have learned that. If you are young and have it to learn,
may this be the year it comes to you. And may you end this new year with more
friends, more peace and more wisdom than you began it with. Those are the three
things no man can ever have too much of.
Write to me at
Box 22, Bolivar, Mo. 65613 or e-mail me at lightninridge@windstream. net My
website is larrydablemontoutdoors.blogspot.com.
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