Tuesday, 01 December 2009
Flying with Egrets
By Jeanne Waite Follett
Late each afternoon, as the earth turns and brings respite from the blue-white heat of day, the egrets cease their daily pursuits and take to the wing. A band of lemon yellow suffuses the horizon as dozens, nay, tens of dozens, of slender white birds fly in waves over the casas and condos, haciendas and houses of Mazatlan, Mexico.
Above the small convenience stores called “super markets,” past the Montana papeleria that sells single sheets of paper or single Band-Aids, still in business despite the behemoth office supply store a half block away around the corner, over the vendor with his two-wheeled cart of tejuinos and large bottles of hot sauce, the egrets fly west into the setting sun.
Drafting off each other in “vee” formations, they fly between the Norfolk pines and the coconut palms, all in the same direction, hurrying before deep lilac and mauve push tangerine to the horizon and chase darkening lemon in pursuit of the vanishing sun.
They fly silently, leading with long beaks and trailing equally long legs, their long tapered wings carrying them swiftly to a nighttime destination known only to them.
I sit in the courtyard with the residents and guests at Burgos condos and watch the daily migration. Often my first glimpse of the birds is a reflection in the shaded windows of the complex. I look up and see them flying low over the two-story buildings.
When I first saw them and learned they were egrets, I wondered what they did with their long necks while in flight. Each evening I watched them, looking for the necks. Then, finally, I saw a fleet at a propitious angle, and could discern those necks folded back on themselves into a snowy white “ess.”
No one in this group knows where the egrets go at night. I considered various options to learn the secret whereabouts of their evening sanctuary. I pondered how to follow the flock before the indigo blanket of nightfall covers the land.
The birds fly too low and too swiftly to track. They abide by their own compasses and do not follow the streets of cobblestones, coarse pavers and yellow-striped asphalt that delineate pathways for earthbound men.
I spent long minutes at Starbucks while Google Chrome downloaded Google Earth. Perhaps an aerial view, a “bird’s eye” view, will reveal some water sanctuary of which I am not aware. Google Earth showed me man-made canals for the exclusive use of palatial haciendas with private boats and beyond that, the great and ever-rolling Pacific Ocean.
Then I explored closer to home: why do I want to know? Surely by the time the birds arrive there, wherever “there” is, the light would be too dark to photograph what must be a mind-boggling number of sleek white birds standing upright, long graceful necks posting their whereabouts.
And then I decided I don’t need to know, don’t want to know.
All we creatures, all the creatures of the earth, need our private sanctuaries, the places we go to rest, regroup, recover and recharge. Like the egrets flying to their place of refuge, we all need that secret destination, even if - perhaps especially if - it’s only a quiet place in our minds.
[INVITATION: All elders, 50 and older, are welcome to submit stories for this blog. They can be fiction, non-fiction, poetry, memoir, etc. Instructions for submitting are here.]
Posted by Ronni Bennett at 02:30 AM | Permalink | Email this post
Comments
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Just a wonderful piece..In 200l summer I spent my summer week before Labor Day at Rehoboth Beach, Del, it was the 7th & last year..none of the 5 women I attended with remember who told us to walk down to the little pond about half a mile from the beach house, but at 6:30 pm, off we went..little knot of folks there, some with baby strollers, few in wheelchairs, just quietly standing around the pond..since we had strolled around it daily on our way to town, we stood waiting too..all of a sudden, looking across the quiet pond, I felt like the weeping willow trees looked totally different than the daytime view..and then somehow my eyes took in the whole side we were looking at and there they were, hundreds of egrets (which to that date I had only seen in my children's ABC books years before..it looked like hundreds of men had come home from work and hung their white shirts from the collar on the trees..it was incredibly quiet and when I am with those women someone always recalls it as sort of religious almost..we went every night that week and for the years later..we never, ever saw an egret before that moment..Nature continues to be more wonderful than ever we realize until those moments..Again thank you for that beautifully done essay...Mary Follett
Posted by: mary follett | Tuesday, 01 December 2009 at 05:14 AM
Your words skillfully disprove "a picture is worth a thousand words." ann berger
Posted by: ann berger | Tuesday, 01 December 2009 at 09:39 AM
Lovely. Thank you.
Posted by: Mage B | Tuesday, 01 December 2009 at 10:55 AM
So evocative and beautifully written--oh, how I would have loved to be there--but I saw it through your eyes and words. Thank you.
Posted by: Lyn Burnstine | Tuesday, 01 December 2009 at 01:36 PM
A wonderful story. I can just see the area, the Egrets and the migration. You are an excellent writer. Thank you for the word picture.
Posted by: Darlene | Monday, 07 December 2009 at 09:05 AM