The Hopes of Ferns
The last picture of Chet, free to run, for at least three weeks. I know that every dog owner thinks her dog is the breed standard, but my beautiful little man-dog makes me catch my breath. At 24.3 lb., he'd better quit filling out or he'll be too big to be "perfect!" (The breed standard has an upper limit of 25 lb.) Three weeks of enforced rest aren't going to do much for his waistline, that's for sure.The surveyors who are shooting the corners on our land came again this morning and were all happy to see their "little buddy" again. Chet Baker had run himself ragged escorting them around our place yesterday. One mentioned that he'd noticed that Chet was favoring one hind leg.
Yeah, I know. That's why he can't come with you today.Chet was vexed at me for keeping him inside all day. As consolation I let him come out to visit with the surveying crew when they came back for lunch. I never cease to marvel at the speed with which Chet is able to win hearts. It was clear they wanted him along. He just makes you feel good to be with him.
And so, when I finally put my boots on and gathered camera and binoculars and notepad to take my sunny-day hike, it was very hard to look Chet in the eyes and tell him he had to stay home. He was play-bowing and wagging and so eager to go. And yet I think he understands. I keep telling him we need to rest his leg, and sending him mental pictures of himself holding it up as he walks, and I believe he is getting them.
I took a new route, something I wouldn't normally do with Chet, because there are cattle nearby. I walked north into one corner of our land, and followed a stream all the way out to a neighbor's big pasture.

There are ghosts in these woods, ghosts of the people who used to live in a white Ohio farmhouse atop the hill to the east. They've all died in that house, and the house has been bulldozed and gone four years or more, but the ghosts still wander, I can feel them. I was in a bit of a skittish mood because I hadn't been down here for at least a decade; I knew there was a big coyote den somewhere here and, while pre-Chet I'd have been eager to find it, now it spooks me a bit. I found the skull of a domestic cat at the mouth of a coyote den on our land once, and my worst nightmare would be finding Chet's little round skull on a mound of well-worn earth at the mouth of a den. So naturally, the first thing I found was a pile of bones.
Even though I love a good mystery, I always jump when I find bones in the woods. I'm convinced that one day, if I keep exploring this much, I will find a human body. Deer bones are just about the same size as human bones, and there are always a few moments before I can convince myself that I'm just looking at the remains of an ungulate. Eep. I found the foreleg bones and felt my own arms to make sure they were deer and not human. The great big scapulae were reassuring.I remembered there being a dump in a gully down here, and I found it.
Old dumps aren't as depressing as recent dumps; it's not as jarring (get it?) to see glass and metal as it is to find plastic. The colors go better with the woods, and old trash almost seems to belong there. I did bring this lovely old watering can home for the stone fireplace. It's useless but evocative, and I hate to see it rust to nothing in the woods. I think of Emily Morgenstern watering her flowers with it and it makes me smile. I never knew her but I heard that she would wave from her window at the former owners of our house as they went by every morning. If she wasn't there waving, they'd check on her. Country stuff, survival stuff.
I love finding bottle gardens. And what a treasure trove I found today. It's not hard to see how gardens get started in old bottles that are uncapped. A few leaves blow in and rot, rain collects, fern spores blow in or get carried by insects; the garden begins to grow, a natural terrarium, protected from the harshest weather.

They were all cool. But you have to love this one.
The only possible entry point for these fern spores would be the tiny crack in the Sanka lid. There is no soil in the jar; the fern is living just on its own rotten fronds from seasons past. You have to hand it to plants, you really do. Something in me wanted to open the jar, and free these ferns to the air and soil, but I left the garden just as it was, to return and see what becomes of it.This one blew my mind. I couldn't find so much as a crack in the jar lid. And yet, inside there was a lump of soil, and a mound of moss, thriving in its closed environment.
The only clue as to how it might have gotten there was a creeping moss frond that had worked its way through the jar lid. But the soil? How did it get in there? Beats me. And why would the moss want to work its way into the jar? Perhaps I shouldn't try to ascribe goals to moss. There isn't a reason, purpose or intent for everything.
Finally I broke out into the Cut, and gazed out on what our neighbors have made of their woods. I looked back over my shoulder at the forest on our land, and realized that there's a place and a purpose for both. The forest holds ever so much more promise, though, of hidden life and birdsong. Two squirrels dashed away, spattering through the leaves, and flocks of golden-crowned kinglets followed me all the way home.


20 Comments:
Oh my, your words and observations are so evocative. You really have me walking the old farm in Muskingum County, even though I am sitting here in Alaska. Sigh....
I'm relating to your spookiness around old house remains. We were walking Indy last winter and I happened to see something down in the woods, across the road from the house. It ended up being an old, abandoned mountain homestead that I swear I had NEVER seen the 6 years I've lived on the mountain--right across from the house, down in the woods, falling apart, no windows...and the hair stood up on my neck. Upon exploration, there were old linament bottles around the house which were going for $40 on eBAY. Guess where they are? Still in those woods. I'm not making the former residents of this 1800's homestead angry by taking their linament bottles. Bad karma :)
The things one finds when walking dogs...
Proof once again that you live in an enchanted forest, witchlady. I've never heard of bottle gardens and now I've added them to my "dearly wish to see" list. Sigh indeed.
The sheer power of words to make one (that would be me) living at some distance from Ohio (that would be Pennsylvania) envy your 80 acre woods. Only Winnie the Pooh of 100 acre woods has your spread beat.
Bottle gardens??!! How cool. I've never heard of them either. They look like they could be wood sprite or fairy greenhouses. Maybe that's how the moss and soil got in that closed sanka bottle?
Christine K.
Tk Pk,MD
A very different feel to this post, Julie. While we all love Chet to pieces, it seems that your focus was broader...or maybe without Chet's presence you were jumpier? It just feels shivery, more than some of your other "walk" posts.
Finding bones gives me the willies, too. My imagination runs naked when I find a leg bone...
I took a walk today and the woods felt EXPECTANT, like it was waiting for something to happen. And I felt like I was being watched.
*full body shiver*
Beautiful post and incredible treasures. I love those jar gardens, and feel such a sense of history and wholeness when I see what lives there.
Leaving Baker behind gave you a nice opportunity! Thanks for the creepy shivers... What you see during your walks everyday are things many people rarely see in their whole lifetime. Isn't that somthing?
Julie, your blog is brilliant. I log on every morning and it transports me to a finer, better world than my own. Your eye for nature is unmatched, your humor charming, and your knowledge of the way the natural world works is unsurpased. Thank you so much for giving all of this a window on your life.
I was getting spooked walking in a nearby swamp by myself for the first time today, too. I kept looking behind me and all around - not just for things I wanted to capture, but for "things" that shouldn't be there. I recently saw an old photo with cool watering cans, and I wishing I could transport them in time to now so we all could have a new "old" watering can. That's great you saved this one!
I'm loving how the season shows the contours of your land. I also have never heard of or seen bottle gardens. Looks like a beautiful little world inside each one.
Thank you all for your kind words. I started to leave a comment, and it turned into a dadburned post, so I'll save it and expound tomorrow. Besides ferns and mosses, there's a lot of meaning contained in fairy greenhouses, it turns out.
It's raining today, so I don't have to face Baker's eyes. We'll stay home together and he'll get his 20-hour beauty sleep.I'm hoping that, sleeping so much, he'll live longer?? It has to work that way! He's in there, rebuilding cells, restoring himself, practically ALL DAY!
I had one of those found natural terrariums once that i kept on the table until an enthusiastic child over watered it and the dirt plug fell through and it's whole environment changed and the plants died.
When my dogs used to bring me a deer leg bone I'd sure hope that was what it actually was! They don't run the woods alone now and we have fewer 'surprises' of a bony nature.
Thanks for taking us with you on your walk today. It was a treat learning about bottle gardens. They do seem a bit magical, don't they?
I have to tell you I'm jealous - ten years since you've walked that area of your land?! Wow. How wonderful to experience everything anew after all that time.
Great post.
Kathy
Circleville, OH
Loved today's post, especially the picture of Chet. Did you ever find the coyote den? Chet is a pretty big guy so at this time in his life I wouldn't worry near so much about finding his pretty little apple head on their doorstep...BT's are pretty feisty...you might want to worry about finding a coyote fur welcome mat on yours! These dogs have delusions of grandeur and just try convincing his grandmother she isn't a rottweiler.
Full moons free the spirit(s).
RR
Wow! Those ferns and moss are spectacular!
Spooky woods. I get it. My son, as we were driving home in the dark last night, said, "Mom, the woods are cool but at night, they are scary!"
My husband and I speculated that a deep seated fear of being alone in the woods could be some sort of instinct that kept our ancestors alive!
Wonderful post, julie. I like taking this walk with you. Your observations are so cool. It's like being there right beside you. Quite exciting, especially those bottle gardens. Wow. Lovely.
Julie,
I wouldn't worry about Chet expanding. He reminds me much of Chloe. She's always been very lean and trim, even now at the age of 10. Her top weight is 23.5 lbs. without an ounce of fat on her. Bella, on the other hand, is smaller (by nearly 2 inches - height & length) than both Chet and Chloe and is topping the scales at 24.5. When we question her about her weight, her answer is, "I'm not fat, I'm big boned. Gimme another Cheesy Poof." Jane might remember her thickness :)
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