Journal of a Sabbatical

July 26, 2000


deptford pink




Adopt these cats at Merrimack River Feline Rescue Society.

See cats, dogs, geese, and more at Adopt Homeless Paws. Adopt them.

Today's Bird Sightings:
Plum Island
northern mockingbird (3)
purple finch (2)
eastern kingbird (10)
least tern (2)
great egret (3)
snowy egret (2)
lesser yellowlegs (2)
redwinged blackbird (4)
western sandpiper (1)
solitary sandpiper (1)
semipalmated sandpiper (1)
common tern (1)
Canada goose (53)
willet (1)
mallard (9)
gray catbird (5)
American robin (3)
double crested cormorant (5)
barn swallow (2)
tree swallow (1)
herring gull (3)
tricolored heron (1)
mourning dove (2)
cedar waxwing (1)
yellow warbler (1)
American crow (2)

Today's Reading: Cape Cod by Henry D. Thoreau

Today's Starting Pitcher: Red Sox rained out

 

2000 Book List
Plum Island Bird List

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Copyright © 2000, Janet I. Egan


jasmine-2The forecast calls for rain starting at noon and deluging for the next 48 hours. The gray skies weigh heavily on my bleary eyes. McDonald's coffee does nothing to wake me up. Maybe that's because it's so bland I don't drink enough of it to keep up my caffeine dosage. I don't even bring the cup in with me to finish as I do the dishes.

It takes me awhile to get into a rhythm. Once a pile of clean dishes starts forming, I feel productive and engaged. The pile of clean dishes in the drainer builds. I feel euphoric. What's up with that? And that damn light over the sink is burned out. A definite mixed blessing. On the one hand it is not heating the top of my head to the boiling point and causing rivers of sweat to drip into my eyes. Just try wiping your eyes with bleach-soaked rubber gloves. I dare you. On the other hand, the crap stuck to the litter boxes is difficult to see. I guess I prefer it off. I hate to be too hot.

Sandy is sulking in his cage, still quarantined for biting. I'm sure he's wondering what the heck happened. Nobody has taken over the big yellow bucket yet, but Titan is strutting his stuff and trying to establish dominance while Sandy's out of commission. But the bucket, fridge, and sink area seems to hold no appeal for him. He'd rather entice cats away from the social center in Sid's cage. For awhile, even Sid gets interested in Titan's doings.

Miss Newburyport, that old curmudgeon, is sleeping on top of the cat gym but remains on full alert in case anybody should try to pet her. Tigger, a new kitten, vocalizes constantly. Meow, meow, meow. He doesn't shut up unless somebody comes over and pets him. He's wicked cute, though. Tommy and Simon have been sprung from the ringworm room. Yay!

We're all in the swing of cleaning to the tune of Tigger's kittenish meow when suddenly a whistle floats up from the stairwell. A high pitched whistle that sounds familiar. All ears, human and feline, turn toward the door. The whistle sounds again. Closer. Roy! Sure enough, the door opens and there is Roy piping himself aboard. Finally recovered enough from the surgery the docs said he'd be over in a month. We lost track of how many months have passed since then. First thing Roy asks about is Chloe and Whiskers his two favorites. I give him the happy news that Chloe is fat and happy in her new home and I have pictures to prove it. Then I tell him Whiskers died of heart disease, but at least was well cared for in her last weeks. We quickly get back into our old rhythm of washing, drying, bad jokes, nonsense verse and laughter. It's way easier to wash all this stuff with Roy around.

Bob and Roy both get away with petting Miss Newburyport. Though she starts wagging her tail in a most unhappy manner, she doesn't bite or scratch. The guys are drawn to these old curmudgeonly cats and the cats seem to tolerate them. Jaguar (still alive and happy in his permanent foster home) used to love Roy. Whiskers dug him too - not that she was old, just curmudgeonly.

A French-speaking family with very deep suntans - they look like they've been basking on the beach all summer without a drop of sunscreen, the color I could never attain even if I did skip the sunscreen - come in looking for kittens. I direct them to Cindy in the office for an an adoption application and a look at the black and white kittens as well as the photos of kittens in the foster homes. They chatter in French and hover around Tigger's cage. Tigger hams it up for them. Cuteness personified - or felinified. They ask about adopting Tigger. I again direct them to Cindy while I play fake-mouse-on-a-string with Titan. Finally they connect with Cindy.

By this time I am starving and developing caffeine withdrawal from having been unable to down the McDonald's coffee. Roy tells me he thinks McD's is as good as Dunkies. I say not. Then again, maybe it's just the North Andover McD's. The Salisbury McD's could be on a par with Dunkies... Anyway, I go get lunch at Angelina's and coffee at Fowle's to restore me. The TV at Angelina's is showing a documentary by and about a disabled artist who paints with a brush strapped to his head. The soda machine is out of change. The sandwich is good though.

A drive-by birding pass in the gathering gloom yields one surprise: a western sandpiper. It's feeding in the salt pannes near some semipalmated sandpipers. At first I thought it was just another semipalmated, just a little chunkier. A closer look revealed a much thicker bill that kind of dropped down at the tip. Just to be certain, I check the book. Western sandpiper fits it to a tee. Cool. A new bird for the Plum Island list. Otherwise it's mostly the usual suspects except for the tricolored heron at Hellcat. It's really close for a great look. It's fishing up a storm and a nearby snowy egret tries to horn in on the piscine bonanza. The tricolor spreads its wings wide and charges at the intruding egret. They scuffle and the egret backs off. There seems to be plenty of whatever fish they're catching - little silvery things. The clouds are making it almost too dark to bird even though it hasn't started raining yet. On the way back to the gate, I stop to photograph more weeds. They seem to shine more brightly in the gloom.

rabbit's foot clover and deptford pink

Rabbit's Foot Clover on the left, Deptford Pink in the center

Queen Anne's Lace

St. John's Wort

Common Tansy

Bird's Foot Trefoil

Not sure on this one. Maybe Meadowsweet?

Somewhat restored, I browse at Olde Port Books and tease Phil about seeing him in the Andover Starbucks yesterday out of context. Turns out he had just come from David Bookstore's shop. I told him he should stop by Starbucks earlier in the morning when David Bookstore, Richard, Dick, and QI have their "morning discussion group". Without Domino's help, I select a book called The Lake and the Woods or Nature's Calendar by Mikhail Prishvin. It's a collection of short, almost miniature, essays about the fauna and flora of a lake (Lake Pleshcheyevo) in Russia. Sort of the like the Russian version of The Birds of Brewery Creek or something. More inspiration for Sewage Outflow and the Oranges of Hieronymous Bosch. Anyway, Domino was hiding out in the window 'cause there had been a group of kids in earlier. I wonder if they were those French ones... Just as I leave the book shop, the rain starts. What timing.

This just in, a dead crow in Jamaica Plain has West Nile virus. It's moved north. What a field day for the deet!