Caption… some of the kids who visited our Panther Creek getaway this past weekend. The creek is very low, and water is becoming stale and dirty. Rain is badly needed |
As
I have been doing for a while, I will start things off with the master
naturalist quiz. Of the several
species of hawks found in the Ozarks, which one is known to nest the earliest
in the spring?
By
the way, any master naturalists who bring their master naturalist certificate from
the MDC to our swap meet this coming Saturday at Brighton can get a free spring
issue of my outdoor magazine!
And
another piece of good news… for anyone who might have outdoor stuff to sell, we
still have three tables available free of charge. Even if you have only one or two items to sell, maybe an old
shotgun, a tackle box full of old lures, a minnow bucket, a hunting knife,
whatever… bring them and find me and I will put those items out and sell them
for you. If you have a boat or
canoe for sale you can set those up in the parking lot. We already have a 50 hp Evinrude and a
22 foot antique river johnboat to sell.
I
am often asked if I have any of my late Uncle Norten’s handmade sassafras
paddles for sale, and I am going to bring one this Saturday to put on a silent
auction. It is one he made and
signed about ten years ago. I am
going to use the money for our Panther Creek Kid’s place, and I know he would
like that. I have told vendors who
are coming from a good distance that they can stay overnight at our Panther
Creek place at no charge. Anyone
who needs a room needs to call me so I can save one for them.
I
am tickled that Chuck Duren is coming.
He is a great woodcarver from Stockton, but he has quite a past. He played basketball at the University
of Missouri in the fifties. One of his teammates was Norm Stewart, and Chuck was
the starting center there for two years.
Chuck played four games against another center for Kansas by the name of
Wilt Chamberlain, then went on to sign a baseball contract with the Milwaukee
Braves, playing on a minor league team with Tommy Aaron, Hank Aaron’s brother.
I
am hoping it rains Saturday, to ensure a greater turnout. The rain makes it so that folks aren’t
out fishing or tending to their garden and they are more apt to spend the day
with us. But of course the main
reason I am hoping for rain is because we have a terribly bad short-term
drought going on in much of the Ozarks. Our creeks and rivers are drastically
low and fish need a good rise to give flowing shoals enough water for a
successful spawn.
It
is ironic that a lot of rain at the right time can really hurt the spawn of
crappie and bass in our lakes if they rise too quickly and too much. But our streams are in bad shape,
becoming choked with algae and slime that was never seen in Ozark waters fifty
years ago.
Spring
floods often clean out our streams for a while, so we need them now worse than
ever. But you know the slime and
pollution is going to be a problem in the dead of summer. With the low water we have, it is worse
than I have ever seen it in early spring.
There
is little use talking about changing things. Populations and progress take the forests and the waters
away in great chunks now, and the fact that we are going to increase our
numbers by the hundreds of thousands in coming years seals the fate of our wild
places. For
a billion people to survive here, forty or fifty years in the future, you
cannot preserve big trees and clear waters filled with fish. And certainly,
kayakers and canoeists don’t really need clean water, they just need fast
water. Seems like we are heading toward a time when droughts or floods are all
you can have. That has been the
story in past years. I have seen
our Ozarks rivers at the lowest point they have ever been and then at the
highest level they have ever been, IN THE SAME YEAR, several times since the
late ‘90’s.
The
Ozarks, once a sponge for the heavy rain, now has become a brick. The hills hold far less storm water as
forestland shrinks, and we increase pavement and concrete and make heavily-grazed
hard pasture on once-timbered slopes that soaked up rain.
With
modern technology that makes
entertainment so diverse and easy to obtain,
people that treasure wild things and wild places will be scarce in future years. What those few of us find so wonderful
in the unmarred creation of God will not be necessary at all to people who come
after us. Find a youngster today
who would give up their little technology boxes for the chance to hunt
squirrels or learn to fly-fish.
See what I mean?!
I
look at the world today and realize that indeed there is a steep cliff ahead of
our racing civilization that no one can see. Men have grown into something different that they were
created to be, casting aside things like common sense, faith in God and a
belief in honesty and integrity. Find that stuff in Los Angeles or New York or Chicago.
If
indeed there is a God, some say, why would watch the evil that is taking over
and just let it pass. Wouldn’t it bother Him to see the wonder of his creation
destroyed so easily and so quickly?
The future will tell, and none of us will see the awfulness of it unless
that little fat moron that runs North Korea gets impatient with his bombs. Then who will worry about clean rivers
or forests, unless we can find caves in them?
I
guess what you have to do is enjoy one day at a time, try to get as far as you
can away from it all by retreating to the wildest corners of the earth where it
still seems like God is watching, and there is still some of that in the
Ozarks. We need to be thankful for what is there, and the fact that the
concrete and the pavement and the worship of money, and most of the problems it
creates are a good distance away.
It
is a good way to find happiness and peace and contentment. If only there weren’t any ticks!
To find out more about our swap meet on Saturday you
can call me at 417 777 5227. Or
you can send an email to my executive secretary, Ms. Wiggins, at lightninridge@windstream.net and have
her send you a map on how to get there.
Remember, it is free to the public. Biscuits and gravy from 8 to 9 and then lunch at 11. Come and visit with me there and you
will find some bargains, I am sure.
Answer to the quiz… the earliest nesting hawk in the
Ozarks, as a rule, is the red-shouldered hawk. They are similar to the red-tailed hawk, but they have a
scream that has two distinct notes, while a red-tails scream is just one long
note.
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