Posts Tagged With: quill gordon

After Irene

(More video and some photos later. Maybe. Now is not the time for that and there is plenty of footage available on YouTube and other places.)

There was nothing to do this week but grab the chainsaw, shovels and rakes, and head to the center of our little village and get to work. Some said to wait for the folks from the State, or FEMA, to arrive but the overriding sentiment was to wait for nothing and do it ourselves. Without power, phones or roads, no one knew for sure what was going on in other places but there was a mess to clean up and neighbors to help.

The contents of homes and business were disgorged and piled outside to dry and be sorted. Entire lives and households at the roadside, mangled and muddy, exposed for all to see. Generations of accumulation, treasure become trash.

Inventories and equipment spread out in the sun to be salvaged or tossed, insurance adjusters be damned; hugs and tears exchanged as thick, sticky mud dried to dust the consistency of corn starch. Devastated neighbors helped devastated neighbors, and will continue to help long after the news cycle has moved on and the satellite trucks have a new disaster to cover, somewhere else.

Bridges are gone. Roads are gone. Homes are gone. Dumpsters, porta-potties, propane tanks and the contents of entire buildings swept away in the deluge. Lives changed forever but not ended; invisible scars that may never completely heal.

A steady stream of people from other places has come through the village this week, slowing down to stare at the dirty, dusty, muddy villagers who stumbled around like zombies, putting the shattered pieces back together and each day there has been less at which to stare.

The village green is green again, cleared of debris and freshly mowed. Lights shine from windows and last night the show went on at the Playhouse. Banks of gravel, sand and silt have been swept from the main street and “Open” signs have begun to reappear. People are sharing what they have left with those who have none, downed trees have been cleared and now they go to work further from home, assisting others because that’s what you do.

It will be a long time before things get back to “normal,” whatever that is, but it will happen. Fall is in the air and the leaves on the trees (the ones that are left) have begun to turn. Leaf peepers and rubber neckers will gawk, just like they do every year, and if you happen to find yourself up this way (in spite of all the detours) you may be tempted in spots to say to yourself, “It looks like nothing happened here.”

That’s because a lot of people worked very hard to get it that way.

“Vermont is a state I love. I could not look upon the peaks of Ascutney, Killington, Mansfield,
and Equinox without being moved in a way that no other scene could move me.
It was here that I first saw the light of day; here that I received my bride;
here my dead lie, pillowed on the loving breast of our everlasting hills.

I love Vermont because of her hills and valleys, her scenery and invigorating climate,
but most of all because of her indomitable people. They are a race of pioneers who have almost
beggared themselves to serve others. If the spirit of liberty should vanish in other parts of the union and support of our institutions should languish, it could all be replenished from the
generous store held by the people of this brave little state of Vermont.”

Calvin Coolidge, after the flood of 1927

(It would be inappropriate to not mention that the crews responsible for restoring power to our village drove all the way from Ontario, Canada, to do so. To them, and the crews from all across the country who came to help — along with National Guard troops from several states — there is nothing to say but “Thank you”.)

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West River at the Old Mill, Weston, Vermont 08/28/11

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Photo Phrenzy, Part the Third: Carnivorous Plants!

There are swamps and bogs and all sorts of wet spots full of mosses and ferns around Fish in a Barrel Pond. Appearing lush and green, these areas are actually highly acidic and lacking in nutrients; very challenging places to live if you are a plant. The plants that thrive here in spite of it all are able to do so because they posess special traits, and some are even able to extract nutrients from insects they capture.

I have seen pitcher plants, deep in the bogs of Maine, and I have seen Venus flytraps in plastic cups on the counter at the local garden center but until last week I had never seen a sundew. Insects are attracted by a sweet scent and become trapped on sticky hairs on the sundew’s leaves. The leaves then slowly curl around the prey, enzymes digest the meal, and the sundew gets what it needs to live, bloom and set seed.

On a recent walk with our consulting foresters, I asked if there might be sundews growing nearby and within ten minutes they found several clusters, growing in the peat. I must admit I somehow expected something a little more carnivorous looking…

but it’s still cool to see something I had never seen before:

Round Leaf Sundew (Drosera rotundifolia)

 

Categories: nature, Vermont | Tags: , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Photo Phrenzy, Part #2: Butterflies and Caterpillars

Okay, the first one is not a butterfly. It is a clear-winged moth. Continue reading

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Photo Phrenzy, Part #1

Quill Gordon was actually let loose for a day last week and took a little road trip to Manchester, Vermont.

Orvis

One dozen flies and two marked-down leaders are all I was talked into this day, but shopping was not why I drove over the mountain to Manchester. Continue reading

Categories: Fly Fishing, Vermont | Tags: , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

A Minute and a Half on an August Eve, Complete with Rises

Sometimes, the best thing to do is go sit on a dock.

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A Mayfly, Up Close and Personal

I took a bunch of pictures yesterday and, as usual, found myself wondering what I would ever do with them. Thanks to Rebecca and her photo prompt at the Outdoor Blogger Network, I have an excuse to post a couple.

Transparent Mayfly

I still haven’t figured out how to tie a transparent mayfly imitation but I am pretty sure a lot of the rises I saw last evening were to these guys (and gals). Of course, I only say that because I couldn’t see a darn thing on or in the water, even though I was surrounded by rises.

I did get some enthusiastic refusals of a #18 sulfur spinner, though. It is August, the time of long leaders and tiny flies.

Tight lines, y’all.

 

 

Categories: Fly Fishing, Vermont | Tags: , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Seven Photos

Summer is Winding Down

The Loon Chick Keeps Getting Bigger and Bigger

A Kingfisher

Yellow Mushrooms and a Bug

Milkweed and a Monarch

Heading Out to Fish the Evening Rise

Summer Sky Over Fish in a Barrel Pond, August 7, 2011

Categories: nature, Vermont | Tags: , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Away From It All

“Quill Gordon! Come out from under there, you fool!” said my old friend, Milt Audette. “Hiding from Marge Feely again? Very unbecoming, you know. You’re in serious danger of compromising your standing with me, hiding under the porch from a seventy year-old woman.”

“Oh, yeah?” I countered. “Concealment is a dying art. It’s a manly art. Like that time you got burned, hiding behind your furnace at home.”

“I was hiding from my wife. That’s different. What has gotten into you?” Continue reading

Categories: +The Neverwas Nonesuch Angling Society, nature | Tags: , , , , | 7 Comments

Flashback Friday: Got a Light?

I sometimes carry a pipe in the evening, puffing on some Captain Black when the mosquitoes are particularly aggressive. Some evenings are just not complete without a nice cigar but smoking no longer holds the allure it once did. There was a time, though, when (male) anglers were almost expected to smoke and the image of an angler with a pipe in his mouth became darn near iconic.

Continue reading

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