An NPR Day

This day: big exhale. It started off with seeing BOTB off yet again, this time to Akron, Boston, and parts of northern Ohio. Looking at our schedules this winter, I wondered what it would be like to live through this spring, and now I'm finding out. Our wonderful home feels like a place where we throw our suitcases, run the washing machine, and sleep occasionally. I started missing him before he left. It gets harder to wave goodbye each time. He knows. He came dashing home to say goodbye again at lunchtime before he had to leave for good. It helped.
I was feeling blue for a number of reasons. The underlying reason: April 10 is the day my father died in 1994. I always try to suspend the normal stuff that fills my days on April 10, and do something that honors his memory. I decided to plant peas. He was a gardener, a man of the earth. So last night Liam and I counted out and soaked about 400 sugar snap peas and this morning they were nice and fat. I was digging a trowel trench for the first row when the phone rang. I was wanted in Athens, an hour and a half away, to record an interview with Melissa Block, about the effects of the cold snap (is it a snap when it lasts more than a week?) on birds. We'd corresponded about it, and she decided it would be newsworthy. It was about 1:15 when I got the call. I had to be in Athens by 3. I called Sue, the beloved school bus driver described in an early commentary, and asked her what I should do, because Phoebe had softball practice, and I'd miss him at the bus stop, and Bill wasn't here to catch for me. This is part of what I love about living here. People stop to help. Without a moment's hesitation, Sue suggested that Liam ride home with her, and I was off, pedal to the metal, headed for Athens. I grabbed a handful of tamari wasabi almonds and a pint of yogurt on my way out the door. That was lunch.
Oh, rot. Gas tank empty. Why would I need to keep gas in the car, living 20 miles from town? Red "CHECK GAGE" light and all. Yes, Ford spells it "GAGE." Stop for $20 worth of gas. Throw the bill on the counter and race back out to the car. They know me at the Pit Stop and didn't bat an eye. Jump back in. Speed all the 50-mile way, thanking the powers above that the road to Athens is fairly straight, and you can see a long way ahead, scanning for cops. I hate speeding, have been pinched more than once for it, (see Nature Girl Gets Pinched, one of my favorite posts of all time) but when NPR has studio time reserved at 3, you're darn well there at 3, even if you have to fly low to make it there. The engineer at WOUB, Mark Robinson, staved off a prior studio commitment to help me set up the audio connection with Washington's NPR studio. Gosh, I have come to adore Mark Robinson. He is THERE for me.
I slid into the padded chair in the darkened studio at 2:57. Melissa greeted me through the headphones at 3:00 on the dot. We talked about cold weather and birds. A lot of our conversation didn't make it, doubtless because it would have been impossible to fact-check before 4 p.m. Heck, it would be impossible to fact check before 2008. Like the information I got, via a desperate cellphone call to Bill, who called Louise and then called me on my way to Athens, from my friend Louise Chambers at The Purple Martin Conservation Association. Louise said that this cold snap may have caused a nearly complete die-off of adult male purple martins in the affected areas (most of the upper Midwest and Northeast). See, the poor things came home on schedule in late March, but couldn't endure more than a week of subfreezing temperatures, and no flying insect food. That's the bad news. It's likely going to be the worst die-off since the early '80's, when there was an Easter snowstorm. The not-so-bad news is that the breeding female and subadult martins are only just hitting the Gulf Coast, headed north. So there will probably be a whole lot of subadult male martins who get to breed this year, who ordinarily would have been outcompeted by the mature males (the "scouts" in martin landlord parlance). Now we just have to pray the freakin' nature gods don't hit those birds with a late April snowstorm. That would really, really be awful. I'm holding my breath until we hit 80 again and hold it.
So bits and pieces of our conversation made it, and it was good, and I feel deeply honored to be asked to talk about nature on NPR. It aired this evening, while I was out planting the rest of the peas. Liam wandered out to find me, saying off-handedly in his dove-soft voice, "You're on the radio."
WHAT? NOW??
"Yup."
I tore into the house to catch just the last third of it, so I had to listen to it online. Kissed my boy for thinking to come find me. He is the sweetest thing.
What's cool is that I feel as though my deep connection with the natural world is finding its highest use--connecting millions of NPR listeners with nature, too. Making them think about things that might not have occurred to them, locked as they are in home, car, city and office. It's an everyday thing for me. It's something that may not enter others' consciousness unless they hear it on the radio. Bringing it to them feels good, and deeply fulfilling. You can listen to my chat with Melissa Block here.
While I was listening to the audio file on the NPR web site, I saw a banner ad for the brand-new Driveway Moments collection. Those are the stories that people nominate, the ones that kept them sitting in the car out in the driveway, listening to the end.
"When Hummingbirds Come Home" is on the newest Driveway Moments 5 Collection: All About Animals.
So it was an NPR day. A saying goodbye day, a Dad day, a sad day, a wild, hairy pea-planting day. DOD, I miss you. Wherever you are, I hope you get public radio.

Labels: NPR, purple martin dieoff


18 Comments:
Oh, Julie. Sigh...my dad died in November, but I always think of him in early April. I think of him puttering around his house in Cincy, listening to the Reds and watching the trees bloom.
Nice NPR day, though. When I get that farm, you can call me!
And my NPR day, besides your lovely interview, was having Sen. Ted Stevens intrude into my dreams this morning. There he was sitting across the table from me at the Crow's Nest. He is known as Uncle Ted here, an icon, benevolent at times and also scary. He was being interviewed by Steve Inskeep and my radio alarm was on. It was an unsettling way to start the day.
Nice interview Julie. Glad you were able to get the peas in the ground. I am sure your dad was smiling down upon you.
The life of a celebrity isn't what it's cracked up to be, eh. Side benefits of educating the public is pretty cool.
I think it's great the way you try to set everything aside to remember your Dad.
RR
I heard the interview last night and yelped out, "Science Chimp!" My partner Kat looked at me like I was insane.
Great commentary! Let's hope the warm weather comes soon.
Way to get the peas in the ground; that's always a good way to heal.
Great NPR piece, Julie. I don't know how you go from digging a garden spot, speeding down the highway, and still have style and composure for Public Radio!
So your peas are in the ground in honor of your father. I understand...
It had better warm up soon!
Forgot to add that I mowed the lawn last night just before dark. It's the other thing I do on April 10, because the smell of small engine exhaust and fresh-cut grass evokes Dad so powerfully. I had a third of a tank of last year's gas, nothing else in the garage cans. Decided to get as much done as I could before the mower ran out of gas. Somehow, I was able to do the whole lawn--more than an hour's worth of mowing. I think Dad refilled the tank while I wasn't looking. He always had a way with engines.
Julie, dear. It is so quiet at the martin houses at the library now. Last week they were filled with chatter and chirtle where I ate my lunch and enjoyed them so much. When I arrived at work Monday there were two adults dead on the porches of both houses. I removed them and waited all day for some to return. Tuesday morning there were three on one house and two on the other just sitting there. They sat still even when I walked under the houses. They were gone when I left for lunch and still were gone when I left at 4:00. After the whooping crane disaster in Florida and now this it's almost too much to bear.
Hoping for lots of fresh peas in June for you. My dad's beefsteak tomatoes grown on the bank of the Ohio were the best ever.
Love to you and the best. Will check out those NPR links.
NPR could use a lot more "nature commentaries" and a lot less political commentaries.
Everyday that you spend doing your best -- being Nature Girl -- is a day that you honor your Dad.
Thanks,
Heather
Wayne, PA
Funny how a date seizes us--my mother died on Mother's Day--so I get a double whammy every year.
As for your NPR moments--I heard you come on, and desperately wanted to listen to the whole piece, but just then my husband arrived at home. So, I talked to him instead. Thank goodness for NPR replays, because now I can hear you & catch up with husband news!
Small engine exhaust? That's OK. The smell of a city transit bus reminds me of my Mother. Memories of us boarding the bus to shop in downtown Baltimore are incredibly special to me. Sounds strange, I know :o)
JudyB's story really got me. Makes me want to go and and buy crickets and scramble some eggs.
I didn't even think about the Purple Martins! Will go search for you on NPR now! I happened to miss that story! BTW: Love how your son told you, you're on the radio, NOW??, Yep!!
Hugs to you, Julie.
On my commute to and from work I have been anxiously looking for some evidence that the early-returning tree swallows are okay. Four more days and we're back in seasonal mid-fifties temps here in snowy Wisconsin...hang on, mother nature!
I heard your interview, and realized, my gawd, that's Julie the birder whose blog I sometimes stop by! What a great back story of how you got the call and got there -- on such a momentous day in your life. Dad would've be proud.
I always love those driveway moments, when I just cannot leave the car until the end of the story. Pure bliss.
Hey Julie. Pat & I heard your commentary yesterday afternoon as it aired. Great Stuff!!! Things are dismal here, too. Peaches, plums, berry bushes, most of the apples brown as toast. Tulip poplars were just coming out, and they are brown too. The same thing happened here in western NC a couple of years ago, and it took 3-4 weeks for the trees to push out their second set of buds. That was a sparse year for fall fruits like wild grapes, cherries, acorns. On the positive side, our blue-headed vireos made it through somehow, and yesterday I spotted the first red-eyed vireo here.
Connie
I heard you on NPR talking about the migratory birds. I feel sad for the purple martins and for all the birds that cannot find food and are not used to freezing weather. The cold spell in richmond has been really hard on the birds that have eggs already. That saturday when we had snow I stayed home all day to feed the BlueBird pair that had a nest in one of my nestboxes. BTW,I love your wildlife drawings too!
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