Field Notes: Oaks Bottom. July 21, 2017.
I've just dropped off my 12-year old at the last day of his last summer camp. I'm presently unemployed and slightly anxious about what the future holds, but ready to take advantage of the free time I have on my hands. A walkabout at Oaks Bottom seems in order. It's early still as I drop down into south meadow, on fire with morning magic. Chicory, sweet pea, and Queen Anne's lace fill the grassland, thistle and teasel, vibrant and rich, exploding up, taller than me.
Pollinators, bees of all shape and size, out in droves and spreading their goodwill. Dragonflies I don't recognize patrol the area, hunting in their sporadic style. Song sparrows, chickadees, bushtits, robins, wrens, and Swainson's thrush. Cedar waxwings, resplendent in their fancy headress, play in the brush. Corvids out too: scrub jays, Stellar's jay, crows of course, and even ravens. The more I learn about this family, the more fascinated I become. I wonder, how do the crows feel when ravens show up from deeper woods? Are they non-plussed by their larger cousins, or are they a threat not to be tolerated?
Across the pond from the Springwater bike path, the purple loosestrife looks to be coming in. The crazy weather these past couple years had seemed to have quelled its expanse, but this mild summer might give the invasive yet gorgeous wetland grass a new lease. Two wood pallets drift lazily on the still surface. On one, a cormorant stands motionless. Almost if, by his non-motion, he's somehow invisible. I see you, dude. On the other pallet--which looks a raft straight out of a Mark Twain novel--a great blue heron patiently grooms. And high in a towering cottonwood, just 30 meters hence, another great blue sits perched, looking quite sleepy. How the heck can they balance so easily, even in slumber?
A small gaggle of geese are seen through my field glasses, lounging in the distance. Seems a little late in the season. Maybe they're coming up north from way south? In fact, how far south is their range? Great drifts of fluff float in the air falling in slow-motion and pile up along paved paths and dirt trails, like low-laying clouds, or a dream, gifts from the regal cottonwoods.
Down along the bluff trail the spring runoff high-waters have receded, revealing the glade in its summer splendor for the first time in months. The brutal winter snowpocalypse took down dozens of trees; windfall--huge limbs and entire trees--is layered around the bottoms like an elephant graveyard. Revealed also: rusted out oil drums, chunks of concrete, and massive timber beams. Reminders that this spot was once an industrial waste dump. Imagine that... a one-time garbage dump, now widely acknowledged as a venerated natural area and part of the Pacific Flyway with countless bird species, right in the heart of Portland. Shows what humans are capable of when they get right with the world and put their mind to it.
I hear what sounds like an upset kingfisher, and the much quieter song of a barred owl. A smattering of mallards, greenwing teal, and a black duck with a white bib (domestic mallard?) gorge on a thick blanket of plankton in the shallows, loudly and audibly feasting. Chow time! Red-winged blackbirds jump around and say dee-doo, and dwee-dee doo, while a downy woodpecker male throws down infectious rhythms. Turn off your device and take out those earbuds, folks, there's music to be heard in these here woods if you but listen.
Western redcedar flush with ripe, green fans of cones. Fat buds hang heavy on Nutka rose. Big-leaf maples glowing, brighter than neon, telling me in no uncertain terms, Be here now. A gang of squirrels swing like gymnasts through the canopy of a hazelnut tree flush with fuzzy-jacketed shells, gleefully noshing the nut flesh then discarding the remains to the floor below.
Just twenty feet away, I stop and watch a blacktail doe, part of a larger group hidden behind a thicket of huckleberry and ocean spray. She's one of the most common large wild animals to share space with humans, and also one of the most beautiful creatures I've ever laid eyes on. I am humbled by her stature and her bearing.
I meander back to the car, filled with gratitude, present, and ready to take on what life throws my way.