“Where the lovelight gleams…..”

It’s in the winter months these past four years that I have routinely anticipated meeting Thelma Pheobe on the shores of Chocomount Beach.

Just right or west of the familiar clump of rocks, just a Frisbee throw seaward from Picnic Rock, I look for her reappearance-remains of her day.

Simply, out in the field, but in my thoughts I see the black and white photograph that hangs in our Henry Ferguson Museum. I stand aground where she did. Remembering her past lives and hearing Pierce Rafferty’s historic depictions of the fateful day in April 1923. When the once former World War I patrol yacht USS Onward, which was transferred to US Coast Guard as a Geodetic Survey vessel in 1919 and later renamed Thelma Pheobe, she became a rum runner during the early 1920’s and wrecked ashore here.

Smashed and shattered porthole glass and whiskey bottle cargo….salted and worn. Petrified deck lumber, crumbling iron…. residuum, remnants, artifacts, imaginings, call them what I will- skeletal remains of her day.

 

As I walk my path, staying my course it occurs to  me that  my compass or innate Naturalist tendencies resonate(sometimes loudly!) and nudge(very pushy!) me ever forward towards my true north-my thoughts and dreams of earth, wind and sky within our  Natural World.

Ever simple ideas, moments, even imaginings of my own native peoples –somewhere, more often than not accompany me out in the field anywhere.

The original tribal Naturalists that once hunted and fished along the coastal sands on and around  Fishers Island- there are moments when I feel passionate that my steps slip raw and  well worn into theirs…each fleeting moment, shadow, breath of breeze fitting  effortlessly into someone else’s ….somewhere in time.

Simply, I always look for proof of this feeling.

While walking the small shore of Mile Creek in Old Lyme, CT. I gazed across the Sound and through the sea smoke of a winter morn-squinting to see my “homeland”, an Island vacant now of hunters and gatherers…my eyes fall upon the  immediate sand beneath me.

I see an arrowhead, Perhaps, from the long ago Nehantick (Niantic) tribe, east of the Connecticut River, blazing trails amidst “long necked waters”….naturally.

 

I don’t know for certain how much wood a Woodpecker pecks, but I am learning to differentiate the specific species.
I haven’t yet documented a Hairy Woodpecker on Fishers Island.

Assuming BOTH birds indeed have feathers … the Downy version of the bird is most familiar to me.

At first glance The Downy pecks with a tinier bill (in proportion to its head) than its Hairy relative.

Take binoculars and check out for black or gray spots on outer tail feathers-this is the Downy too.

Listen closely for a stronger, rattling voice from the Hairy Woodpecker-perhaps in the mature woods mid Island.

 

Glacial moraine set the table steadfast in Tide’s wavering sands.

Please, be seated.

Drink in the vast view atop and over, and over again a crest of Wave.

Feast upon it ALL!

Sea’s glimmer and glint lead to Glow.

Take a close look these days before the first snows settle on shore.  Swept beaches south side and coves tucked away facing north with frosty firm sands will help Islanders “Keep Track” of local wildlife: Deer, Coyote, Rodent, Raccoon……