The estimate in hand, I should be examining the size and scope of the 58 windows that need to be replaced, but the lure of my curiosity and the call of my hiking boots by the back door make it difficult to discern what the next step should be on the house and easy to step outside especially with all the activity the night before.
I saw her in a wide-open span of grassy floor in the middle of the afternoon, not the usual activity of the deer that pass through near dawn and dusk. I found myself patiently moving from one window to the next attempting to catch the best view of the bountifully expectant doe. This poor deer had spent the afternoon and well into the evening rolling on her side in need of a deer doula, her tail flipping as she was keenly aware of the impending arrival of her darling fawn. Certain I was going to witness the birth along with several houseguests, I found myself disappointed at dusk, when she made her way to standing and along with her fellow does gently found their way back into the woods. As a mother myself, I felt her pain of the false alarm and days of contractions while anxiously awaiting a new arrival and I offered her a prayer as my head hit the pillow trusting nature’s infinite wisdom and timing.
As I quietly made my way through the wet woods the next day, the ground like a soft memory foam mattress beneath my feet, I could find no sign other than the beaten path that the mother-to-be had made her way through the night before. I wondered if her new fawn was tucked away resting on the roots of one of the majestic maternal trees and if this fellow mom would be so kind as to grant me a glance of her new love.
Finding no evidence of the newborn fawn, I reluctantly let go of that glimpse for the afternoon and decisively hiked towards the house and the real work at hand. Trees both big and small aided my return as they seemingly reached out their branches to guide my steps along the swollen soil and composting layers of leaves. Despite the disappointment of not witnessing the new arrival, each trek, almost as if a gift, offers something new to discover.
A massive mushroom cradles a few dewy drops to drink in as it clings to a long dead limb while gelatinous waves of white matter sprout from the worn bark of a log sunken in the soil transforming itself from the heightened home of birds and squirrels to sustenance for an entirely new ecosystem as it slowly becomes one with the soil that once held its roots. From disappointment arose discovery and I felt more like a novice scuba student on a deep dive along a coral reef rather than the hiking homeowner adrift in decisions hiding among the trees.
Nearby colorful conks cling to the side of another log creating a reef of wild fungi as two tiny mushrooms shoot up atop a hardened shell of conk as if signaling the way home for the tiny forests nymphs that surely inhabit this magical place. At least that’s what I’d like to imagine at this moment anyway. That’s my Irish whimsy taking hold. There will be plenty of time to analyze the pictures and google the names of all the mold and spores that I lay eyes upon, but for now I am going to rest in the awe of it all, dreamy as a child whose imagination creatively crafts a wondrous world of fairies and fantasies that abide in this magical kingdom of mushrooms and mud that to most grownups resembles a rotten old log.
I wasn’t long from my hike and childlike wonder when science found its way in as I happened upon Suzanne Simard, a professor of forest ecology from the University of British Columbia, while traveling to our hops field across the river later in the day. As soon as the key turned in the ignition, Suzanne’s voice spoke through the radio and I heard three words: forest, fungi and “magic.” Relieved that science wouldn’t break my childlike spell, I listened to the last few minutes of Radiolab on NPR as Suzanne explained how trees talk to one another through this massive underground network that some colloquially refer to as the “Wood Wide Web.” The Mother trees, as she refers to them, are the larger, older, hub trees in cooperative communication with the fungi, as they share and offer defenses for trees of differing species all the while caring for their own young. Our not too distant relatives through the discovery of shared DNA, the fungi and the trees cooperate and take care of each other by sharing what they each have to give, carbon from the trees and from the fungi, minerals and nutrients mined and hunted among the pebbles, stones, and rich rocks for the trees when they are in need.
Fascinating science, but among all her studies what struck me the most was her same childlike awe of the forests. You could almost hear that inner voice of a child coming through her heavily loaded scientific vocabulary; it only deepened my wonder and gratitude for this connection nature has made. It makes so much sense that a simple hike among these towering, wise mother trees reminds me that we are all connected and makes me grateful for their willingness to share with any who walk under their branches. Once you become a mother, it is instin ctual to care for your own young; what I didn’t understand is how our worldview changes when we begin to see each person as someone’s baby, a sapling searching for some light.
I have often joked that I have felt like the stump at the end of Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree, but what I didn’t comprehend is the power of that old stump. So, as I gaze at the rotten old logs that line my tiny patch of forest, I am reminded of the mother trees, and I try to rise to the challenge despite the decay each day brings and recognize each change as transformative. Decay sounds depressing, but I rather surrender to the transformation of it all and ride the wild wonderful journey that is life. It is truly amazing to discover that even when we feel we have nothing left to give we have the capacity for an entire new ecosystem. I know science may call it mold, but I stand in the wonder of it all and for today, I am calling it magic.
As I found my feet strengthened by the changing ground and grassy hillside just outside the tree line, I saw my eager hound ready to greet my return and as I climbed up to meet him my eyes were drawn to yet another discovery: a roguse horn coral fossil that waited until today to show itself after 350 million years! What a gentle reminder that this land really was a coral reef all those millions of years ago and that there is always time for another dive.
*Just a note of thanks to the mama who did offer me a glimpse of her new arrival and to my fossil-hunting friend and neighbor Caren for her immediate identification and enthusiasm for my find!