notes from maggie's farm
Baptism by Butterfly; Baptism by Fire
This past weekend I took my seven year-old nephew Brendan to Tenkiller Lake in northeastern Oklahoma for a little nature getaway -- as I have promised to do regularly since moving back.
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In returning to live in Oklahoma I arrived with the hope
that I might be able to provide a parallel universe for my nephews and nieces;
one that created a more significant connection to the natural world and perhaps
would also allow for nature to rank an equal if not more compelling landmark in
a geography rife with organized sports, television and the computer. Spending
time with kids in nature is a responsibility those of us fighting for the
welfare of the environment need to take much more seriously – it is without
question an investment toward the protection of those sacred outdoor spaces we
so dearly love and cherish. I feel the time spent with my nephews and nieces out
in nature is not only an investment toward their emotional and physical
well-being but might even inspire their future stewardship of our
planet.
The trip to Tenkiller Lake was my third outing with Brendan since
returning home in August. These adventures are always taken with the hope that
those mysterious forces of the natural world would arrive bearing some
unimaginably wonderful surprises to create and inspire that sense of wonder so
often missing in kids today.
In our first outing, posted previously, Brendan got a very timely, first-hand, close-up lesson from a western diamond-back rattlesnake; so far – so good. In our second outing at the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, he stepped out of an ice-cold swimming hole formed by spring water trapped in slick travertine rock and was instantly covered from head to toe by about a hundred brightly-colored yellow tiger swallowtails.The idea of butterfly kisses took on a whole new meaning in that moment as I watched this shivering boy undulate in the currents of warm air and butterfly wings on this August afternoon.
For a brief moment I thought he might suddenly be
carried aloft – slowly rising like a wayward balloon meandering in the thermal
currents created by the sheer number of so many softly beating wings.
Butterflies and boy together suspended in the fleeting shafts of bright light
from the afternoon sun were nothing less than pure poetry and looked as if they
had arrived from some other heavenly, ethereal place beyond the pale grasp of
this moment. Brendan’s mother, who died during his birth, was crazy about yellow
butterflies and it was not hard to imagine that these beautiful winged
messengers arrived with her belated but tender kisses. I could only hope this
baptism by butterfly would prove to be such a remarkable moment for Brendan that
it would keep him engaged and longing to return to the natural world in order to
sustain his heightened sense of wonderment.
Last weekend during our outing
in the eastern part of Oklahoma still designated as "Cherokee Country" we took
an early morning walk on a lightly-traveled path that wound through dense
thickets of oak and hickory forest, cut through layers of limestone rock stacked
like the loose and crumbling walls of ancient ruins and meandered down to the
crystal clear shores of Tenkiller Lake. When we arrived to the shore Brendan
announced with wide-eyed bafflement and a sense of nervous alarm that the lake
was on fire. A very warm day was followed by a very cool night and now what
looked like wisps of smoke were being fanned off the water by the early morning
breeze giving the eerie sensation that the water was indeed on fire. Ah, the
bountiful grace of nature seldom disappoints and I cannot contain my gratitude
as it leaps and bounds in these magical moments.
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In our first outing, posted previously, Brendan got a very timely, first-hand, close-up lesson from a western diamond-back rattlesnake; so far – so good. In our second outing at the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, he stepped out of an ice-cold swimming hole formed by spring water trapped in slick travertine rock and was instantly covered from head to toe by about a hundred brightly-colored yellow tiger swallowtails.The idea of butterfly kisses took on a whole new meaning in that moment as I watched this shivering boy undulate in the currents of warm air and butterfly wings on this August afternoon.
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It seems I have come full circle and I arrive some forty years later -- seven years old again and reveling in that first moment that the natural world caught my eye and commanded my senses for what would prove to be the entirety of my life. And that’s when it suddenly dawned on me -- standing there next to Brendan as that watery fire danced and swirled and disappeared into the warming air - that this overwhelming drive I had to see the world was born from that unending sense of wonder and discovery the natural world provided during my childhood years.
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Update
July 2011
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Four years later - back at the sacred water hole. |
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