Another one, head on:
Pictures of Anisoptera by Gretchen Quarterman, 12 May 2010, Grand Bay, Lowndes County, Georgia.
I was going to start by posting a short list, but each item was turning into a review, so I’ll just post them one by one as reviews.
Ecology of a Cracker Childhood (The World As Home),
by Janisse Ray.
How dirt poor crackers and corporate greed destroyed most of the most diverse ecosystem in North America; yet these same people are the tragic heroes of the book. Half autobiography, half ecology, this book will either get you with Janisse’s “stunning voice” or you won’t get it. If you’re from around here, you’ll hear the wind in the pines, feel the breeze, and see the summer tanagers yellow in the sun. If you’re not, here’s your chance to meet a “heraldry of longleaf” up close and personal.
“I will rise from my grave with the hunger of wildcat, wings of kestrel….”See Janisse read in Moultrie. “More precious than handfuls of money.” See her wikipedia page for a pretty good bio.
But read the book.
If nothing else, you’ll never think the same again about Amazon
deforestation once you realize we already did that to ourselves,
and in the south we live in the devastated remnants of what was
one of the most extensive forests on earth, with longleaf pine trees
100 feet tall and 500 years old, maintained by fire, protecting everything from the Lord God bird to the lowly Bachman’s sparrow, from the rattlesnake-eating indigo snake to the beetles that live in gopher tortoise burrows.
The forest can return,
because reforestation can pay.
Meanwhile, there are still places
where you can see how it used to be.
Janisse Ray had a lot to do with preserving Moody Forest, too,
but that’s another story.
-jsq
You did this, didn’t you? Continue reading
Why yes, yes it did. You can see one of the pipes underneath the second log. And the water in the beaver pond is clearly lower.
Maybe the beavers won’t
gnaw down as many trees.
Here’s where the water goes: Continue reading
Good raccoon; run along now: Continue reading
Here’s a nice cypress: Continue reading
They grow in bunches: Continue reading
What lives there? Continue reading
Gretchen, can you use the long lens? Continue reading