The circle completed.
It’s well past New Year.
It’s a while until my birthday.
It’s a long time until next Christmas.
It’s summer now, but soon it will be autumn.
Spring seems distant, winter a memory long gone.
We seem so still. Still, while time and the seasons turn around
us. So still that we do not notice the
movement and flow. We embrace the myth
of stillness and solidity, seeking refuge from the circles and cycles of
change. Yet everyday we pass through and
over, everyday we spin and change. Every
single day we play a part in the circle completed.
------
It’s much cooler on the water than on land; wind washed, sea
sprayed. As the land draws away and we
move out into the Bay, shapes grow from the sea surface to form solid
objects. Islands, natural and manmade,
channel markers. Bright signs that warn
of danger, bright signs to keep us safe.
The bow of the boat skips on the waves and people laugh at the salt
spray shower. Protectively I fold my
arms across the binoculars that hang from my neck; other people wipe the sea
from the lenses of their glasses and cameras.
I love being out in the bay. With its own protective arms of
land, it’s a reversal of the way maps were once drawn, with the land surrounded
by an encircling sea. Only if you look
out to The Heads can you see past the land and out through the ocean haze. The Heads are the narrow entrance to Port
Phillip Bay, a passage through which ships must be piloted by the skilled and
the experienced. Its shallow reefs of
sharp rocks and ancient flooded cliffs have claimed many boats. The rest of the bay is seemingly benign,
where the chance of striking rocks is low.
But the shark tooth of stone is replaced by the soft hand of mud. To be in the middle of the sea and know the
depth is less than two feet is strange.
For large boats to move through the Bay they need to follow
the ghost of the old river that flowed when the world was still iced and so
much water was held, frozen, on the land the sea shrank and pulled away. Subtle shifts in the cycles of Sun and Earth,
deep shifts in the behaviour of the Sun, pushed the Earth and its water in the
direction of ice and cold. Those cycles
still exist; but other, newer, forces are pushing the Earth’s water in another
direction. We have left the time of ice
and are entering a time of greater water.
The ice retreats, the oceans grow.
The beach comes to us as we go to the beach. On the ocean there is no stillness, only
flow and change.
When we arrive at Mud Islands the boat cannot find a gap in
the weedy barrier that fringes the dry land.
We try one place, then another; eventually we find a breach and wade
ashore. There is movement all around. We are surrounded by flying, calling
birds. Young birds, some not yet
airborne, some uncertain on new found wings.
Adult birds, still crisp in breeding plumage, hover over the younger
ones calling in shrill, sharp voices. Most
of the birds are Crested Terns, some are Silver Gulls; all are combinations of
white and grey. The terns sport a dark
head and wind blown crest, the gulls blood red bills and feet. Within one small patch of sand, adults and
their young scream and fight, feed and fly.
In four weeks this part of the beach will be empty, and the only sign of
what was here will be the flickering wings of the dead, buried in sand, taken
by chance or illness or the losing hand of genetics. But on this day we land to a beach full of
life, and the embracing sand will have to wait for the cycle to come full
circle.
------
The walk around the islands starts at the end.
On departure, things unneeded on the journey are left in the
blue-green bushes to await the return of their owners.
Many walks start and end at the same place – the
resuscitative evening stroll, the ambitious mountain walk (planned to impress),
the pram push that sooths both adult and child.
But most of these walks are only circles in a mathematic sense – they
begin and end at the same place, they have no repeat sections. Net analysis would see no difference in them
from a perfect circle – a journey that rotates around a fixed point. But the journey around Mud Islands is almost
a circle in a real sense – albeit, the type of circle drawn by an unsteady
infant hand.
From the air the islands take the form of a yin and yang
sign, with the upper and lower portions of one reaching out to hold the other. Ocean currents and the whim of drifting sand
fill the space between the two with shallow, bird rich, water. Some
areas are always underwater, some are only fluid on the highest of high tides,
and some have remained dry for a few years.
Today’s aerial photograph may show the current shape, but maps and
charts cannot catch the cipher that is the form of these changing islands. Even if you walk around the island to find
its form, the shape of the journey will be determined by the state of the tide.
A walk two hours later or earlier would
have yielded a different shape. Our
knowledge of the exact attributes of the island are as fluid as the water that
surely surrounds it.
At present the island can be reasonably expected to be more
or less where we expect it to be. At
present we can reasonably expect the walk around it to take about four
hours. At present we can reasonably
expect to find birds of a certain type on the islands. But the fine details of these expectations
are conjecture. On all of these points
we can have confidence, but not certainty.
It’s an important point. Whatever
cycles drive the dynamics of the island and its populations, we can have no
absolute certainty about what we will find when we visit.
This is the basis of real knowledge; the acknowledgement of
uncertainty. Once you have absolute
certainty about any issue, you no longer need to think, you no longer need to
question, you no longer need to take responsibility for the consequences of
what you hold to be true. And people who
offer absolute certainty are asking you to give up that most human of gifts; the
gift that took us from the thrall of disease and the spectre of hunger, the
gift that took us from the cave to the near place of space. The gift that allowed us to look far beyond
the limits of the human eye and the reach of the human arm – the enquiring
mind.
That’s an interesting thought to come from walking around a
small island, loud with the call of gulls and terns, and far from the places
where most learning is offered.
------
Lunch is taken by a large shallow pool. Waders, themed variations in leg length, bill
shape and degrees of grey-brownness wander in the water. Wade. The long legged in the deep water, the
short in the shallow. A few ducks make
good on the promise of buoyancy and in the distance white pelicans and black
swans might be standing or they might be floating. Beyond the island, but before the haze
blocked shore, a huge boxy ship passes – trapped between two lengths of land,
shipping in the channel. Importing TV’s,
exporting jobs. Goods, capital, labour
or the unrefined bones of the Earth - the currency flow of a system that makes
light of human needs. A system that
seems to know the cost of everything, but misunderstands its value. A system that
makes much of choice. Choice that is, as
long as you can pay.
------
The mud is soft underfoot and the water is comfortably
sun-warmed. Birds scatter as we wade
towards them, keeping to the shallows, heading for the far shore. A strange white bird brings us to a halt in
the water. With a long beak and legs
it’s not like any bird I have ever seen.
It turns out to be a Bar Tailed Godwit, stripped of colour by some
strange combination of genes and metabolism – it is called, technically, leucistic.
It looks out of place, but seems at
home, settled in its flock, feeding like all the others.
The water shallows and the mud firms as we approach the
land; shells and the ghosts of crabs gather in the shallows. Living crabs sidestep the issue and move back
to deeper water. Silver shadow fish dart
away. Some of my fellow walkers swap
shoes – wet to dry – just before the land sinks again.
Around the bend of the island, scraggy leaf bare bushes grow
almost to the water’s edge. Each bush
is collapsed in the middle, compressed by nesting pelicans. Most have have long since left the colony,
and now feed out in the bay.
But not all.
A head, strangely remote from its body lies in the
sand. It looks more geological than
biological, more fossil than fowl.
Further down the beach a whole bird lies like an arrow head on the high
tide line. Its wings are open but still, its beak open but silent. Members of the group express a kind of horror
at finding a bird like this. One clamps
her hand over her nose and mouth and runs quickly past. “It stinks”, she says. While there is some truth in this, it’s an
overstatement.
I get the feeling it may be the largest thing she has seen
dead – most dead creatures have been rendered down to bite size pieces, with a
name that hides its origin. Beef instead
of cow. Pork instead of pig. It seems the birds – chicken, turkey, goose –
are some of the few meats we eat that are given a real name.
It may have been her first encounter with wild life – and
the gap between the words is intentional.
Wildlife may come to your garden or walk past your concealing hide. But wild life is evidence of the real nature
of life. Life is wild, full of death as
well as life. Driven by change and
uncertainty. Much of what we do everyday
shields us from the wild life and to be brought face to face with its reality
on a sunny beach day is a shock and a surprise.
The bird is dead, but its chicks may be alive. The sinew and flesh may have lost the spark
of life, but the matter will be recycled and reborn. Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen: all the base
elements that combine to form the remarkable chemistry of life will go round
and round and round. It is true that we
are star stuff, born from collisions in the furnaces of suns uncounted. But we are also Earth bound, tied to the
cycles of the wild.
The pelican is having its complexity unwound. The flows of energy needed to keep together
its atoms – as uncounted as the catalogue of stars – no longer flow and from
complexity comes simplicity. But in the
future, when all the strands are broken, from simplicity complexity will once
more arise. No hands from outside of the
world of nature, no intervention from forces beyond recognition. Just cycles of
matter and flows of energy.
The pelican is gone, but the cycles are not. One
day I may, unknowingly, meet part of it again.
------
We return to the beginning.
The afternoon draws on.
The tide turns.
Circles.
Cycles.
Endings.
And new beginnings.
Comments
I agree, that I think the majority of people who react in a negative or appalled way to seeing an no-longer-living animal, haven't seen such before. In some areas we are used to seeing the cycle of life more than others. We live in an area with predators, plenty of them, acting as part of the circle of life. It may make us somewhat less sensitive to coming across the remains of an animal, but perhaps more thoughtful. There's a story there, and as you so poignantly point out - the story continues.
Tremendous piece, Stewart; and to spot an 'unprinted' godwit was bonus! YAM xx
Have a wonderful week, and thank you for stopping by my blog this week.
I don't suppose you could be persuaded to pay special attention to one particular tree and joining us in Tree Following on Loose and Leafy?
http://looseandleafy.blogspot.co.uk/p/what-is-tree-following-and-list-of-tree.html
We have no-one yet from the southern hemisphere and it would be great to be aware of a tree with opposing seasons to our own.