#silentsunday #aisd-new-teacher
Yellow Garden Spider
Let’s talk about the Yellow Garden Spider again, shall we? She’s still there. (Indeed, we found another one near the front door: Beware garden walks in the evening!)
I walked out to check on her this afternoon. She saw me coming, and she scrambled. Not out of sight, just higher up on her web. And you know she was watching me. So I busied myself elsewhere, distributing rainwater in an attempt to encourage the flowers to continue blossoming despite the heat, and to provide for the birds and toads.
After a few buckets near the house and a few by the curb, I checked on the spider. She had moved back to the center of her web, evidently satisfied that I posed no threat. As I took a step closer, I startled two butterflies and a grasshopper. The butterflies leisurely fluttered around the web, but the grasshopper jumped smack into it.
The spider didn’t move. The grasshopper struggled. I thought the story was about to end. But the spider did nothing. I am convinced she had her eyes on me and was therefore less interested in the vibrating strands of her web. So the grasshopper desperately struggled and eventually fell to the ground.
I guess I owe the spider an apology.
My Brother
My brother likes music continuously playing in every room. I often turn it off when we leave. My brother runs his dogs for miles sometimes twice a day. I walk ours around the block in the morning before it gets hot. My brother organizes swims across the lake. I paddle. My brother sets up tents in giddy anticipation of the arrival of his adult children. I am oblivious while mine panics when he realizes he won’t have a place to sleep. My brother lugs buckets of soapy water into the woods to scrub every surface of the outhouse. I sit in there gazing at the spider-discarded pile of dead flies and make a mental note to bring a whisk broom next time, which I never do. My brother celebrates our grandfather’s antique wooden tent stakes that held up the Army tent when we were very young. I pound in shiny aluminum stakes with a shiny sledge. My brother makes joyful music by pounding on a cardboard box as he sings the Wabash Cannonball. I used to sing in the shower. My brother never stops. I struggle to start.
The joys of my brother are many. His days are filled with multitudes, the likes of which I never quite understand. But he is the yang to my yin. I cannot imagine a world without him in it.
Argiope aurantia
1. 1967
They ran out the back door into the field behind the farmhouse. It was summer. The air was warm. The sky was blue. And cousins were everywhere.
The kids ran across the lawn and into the nearby farm field. They ran into the corn rows. And somewhere in there, he encountered a spider web strung between the tall stalks of corn with a huge Corn Spider dangling in between.
He came to a screeching halt with the spider in mid-air inches in front of his face. He was glad he noticed it before running thru. He turned around. And to this day, he has no other recollections of running up and down those corn rows, likely because … he didn’t?
2. 2024
We’ve been out of town a while. The yard has had a chance to wild to itself, and the unusually cool and wet weather has meant that the yard is not the usual brown, crispiness to which we’re accustomed at this point in the summer. (Although starting tomorrow, we’ve got triple digit highs, no rain in the forecast, and certainly crispiness will soon be upon us.)
But for now, there is greenery. There is water in (some of) the birdbaths. There are wild flowers blooming generously. There is grass growing gladly. And there is this suspended in midair on the walkway between the Texas Persimmon and some tall sunflowers.
A Yellow Garden Spider, almost as big as the palm of your hand with its legs stretched out. First one I’ve seen in this yard. Shades of the 1967 corn field.
I’m glad I noticed it before walking thru.
On Travelling Home
1. Five Days / Four Nights
Returning solo to Texas from Michigan was a five day affair. I had the teardrop behind me. I knew that I didn’t want to drive over 60 and so planned to avoid Interstates entirely. (Don’t look at me like that! The Fair and Industrious Trudy is completely onboard with this style of traveling. So it’s not like I went off the deep end when I was driving on my own. I have her endorsement on this, so what else do I need?) Finally, I was eager to squeeze out as many cool-ish days as I could before returning to the heat, and had plenty of time. So it was a five day (four night) affair.
- From Michigan to a campground in the Hoosier National Forest in Indiana.
- From there across Illinois to somewhere in the Mark Twain National Forest in Missouri.
- From there to a campsite on Lake Dardanelle in Arkansas.
- From there to a campsite on the eastern shore of the lake in Lake O’ The Pines in Texas.
- … and then the final leg drive home.
That’s five full days of driving with four nights at reserved campsites along the way.
2. Hard Work
But here’s the thing of it.
Driving solo as pilot and navigator is hard work. Even going slowly, it’s difficult.
There’s making sure you know where you’re going, of course. But your route is full of tricky turns not shown in your paper atlas. And there are changes in road numbering, or non-standard signage making it seem so. And of course you need a customized, super detailed map of the last few miles to the campsite (which you prepared many days ago, right?). Because in most cases, you have no cell service, so your phone can’t guide you. And the left and right turns down oddly-named or oddly-numbered local roads certainly won’t show up in that atlas.
And it doesn’t help that you’ve chosen to drive side roads to the side roads. Slow is beautiful, yes. But slow is also… slow, which means that you’re driving most of the day. Of course, that’s the whole point of the exercise, right? Slow down. Smell the roses. With all great driving efforts there comes rose fragrance. Or something like that.
Still, it’s hard work.
3. Eat + Sleep
And then here’s another thing of it.
Upon arriving at the campsite after a full day of driving, all you can think of is eating and sleeping. No exploring. No hiking. No swimming at the beach. Just eat and sleep. (Maybe a shower in between, depending on the campground.)
After the hours of navigating-driving, I would pull into the campground relieved to have arrived without any wrong turns, relieved to have arrived before sunset (not relishing the prospect of backing up a trailer by myself in the dark). And I would proceed to
- secure the trailer,
- cook and eat a meal,
- sit for a few moments to enjoy the breeze or the view or the swarming mosquitos, and then
- go to bed as soon as I could. (“Mommy, why is that man over there going to bed already?”)
I found myself looking at my watch, asking myself, “Is it ok for me to lie down now?”
4. A Report
So… here is my report.
Traveling like this is a lot of work. You drive all day. When you arrive at your next campground, all you think about is eating and then sleeping. And then you do it another day. And another. And another and another. Hours blend into hours. Days into days. Campgrounds into campgrounds. Looking back, I’m doing well if I can name each night’s campground, let alone picture them.
Wait. Here I am, rambling on about how hard it was, and how hungry and tired I was, how I can’t picture the places I camped at. And you’re wondering, “Dude. Maybe fly next time?”
No. That’s not the point I’m trying to make. My report is this:
Everything I said above notwithstanding, after a trip like this, your soul is deeply refreshed. At least mine is.
Now… unpack the trailer…
Leftovers
1. New York Leftovers
I crossed the St. Lawrence River from Canada to New York windows wide open. The temperature dropped, bringing joy to driving the Thousand Islands Bridge solo despite the lack of anyone to describe the beauty of the amazing world passing below — a world of clear water, of sunlight bouncing off the waves, of dream homes on islands just large enough for a dream home, of boats cruising the lazy river winding between the many islands, of a world far away from mine. As I drove across, the cool air a sort of consolation prize, I smiled to myself, breathed deeply, and upon reaching the southern shore continued on to Rochester.
That evening, Chachi Bette took treated me to a hip dinner at a hip restaurant she knew in a hip location on a hip street and a old, storied part of Rochester. We walked past big houses and elegant mansions as evening settled and the number of diners on the sidewalks diminished. The next day she took me for a walk thru the nearby cemetery, up hilly drives under towering trees beside gravestones some of which were so weathered that you could read nothing even if you stooped to look. And she took me on another walk later thru the nearby park, up hilly sidewalks and up a long cascade of steps, by one of the city’s reservoirs that usually hold water pumped from the Finger Lakes but were empty for maintenance.
On the evening of that second day, I kept to myself the soreness in my hips brought on by our hilly walks as I did a load of laundry (which I swear was not why I stopped by) and as Bette sat at the Oak table in her dining room cutting onions and peppers and olives and rutabagas and what-all for a tuna-pasta salad that we feasted on later. Ok, I thought: rutabagas fine, but the olives I left for her. She made so much salad, there was plenty for my next day’s drive back to Michigan, where I arrived with a few hours of daylight left.
And oh, was I grateful for Bette’s leftover pasta salad, which I devoured in an instant.
2. Michigan Leftovers
Back in Michigan, I walked alone around the cottage in the cool summertime breeze blowing off the lake. There were things to do inside and out, front and back, upstairs and down, putting away some things, cleaning some things, and packing others, all mixed with sitting on the hill, looking out on the afternoon sunlight glistening on water, listening to Bluejays and Kingfishers and the Great Blue Heron and yes the lonely Loon, and noticing the Hummingbird that had noticed the new Tiger Lily blossom.
Janet came over to announce dinner would be at six. Earlier, she and I had collaborated on the assembly some newly-arrived (and I must say unpleasant-to-assemble) chairs so she and Kent may entertain larger crowds on their deck in a breeze overlooking the water from the top of the hill where their cottage sits. When we had finished the final chair with no leftover hardware (because with me a hardware check is always in order), after I had checked that all the screws were tight (because I pictured with horror one of them sitting back only to have the chair give way), only then did I deploy the chairs to the deck. And I kept my soreness to myself as I stood with a silent old-man’s groan from where we had been sitting.
As announced, dinner was at 6:00. We had pulled pork and chicken and baked beans and cole slaw. And mac and cheese. There was plenty for the three of us and then some. So as Kent announced it was time for him to do the dishes, Janet packed some of the leftovers for me to take with me on my trek back to Texas. And at the end of that next day, after many hours driving south on what was supposed to be a short driving day, I arrived at my camp site with just enough time before dark to eat.
And oh, was I grateful for Janet’s leftover pork and beans and mac and cheese, which I devoured in an instant.
Not Shabby at All
The squirrels are chowing down on the White Pine cones. There’s one over there eating one as you might eat a cob of corn. Eating one and then hopping over to the base of a different tree to inspect the fallen cones for a follow-on course. And he just found one right there half the distance from me as where he was just a moment ago. The crowd here is gone. It is just the squirrels and I. They were patient with us. Now soon the place will be theirs again.
A orange-golden sun just descended behind the pines across the lake, it’s rays of dying light stabbing shards of glow into the forest over here on the eastern shore, lighting up tree trunks that had begun to fade in evening gloom, now shining with a momentary sheen.
I text my cousin to ask about sheets and about dog biscuits. We talk about putting chairs in the attic. And life jackets. And so on.
“Have a good trip,” he says, as if to say that I should enjoy the last fleeting moments of my last summer evening here. Our grandfather would have said the same thing.
I reply with a picture.
“Not shabby at all,” he replies.
“Nope. Not too shabby,” I reply back.
And with that perhaps we can just declare the evening chores done and this chair to be for sitting.
© jumpingfish by David Hasan is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License