DON’T UNDERESTIMATE THE UNDERSTATED
The subtle ways Nature signals the inexorable reality of change, are useful lessons for anyone trying to sort out, or at least cope with the messy world of humanity before it’s too late.
As regular “perch” readers will have at this point already figured out, my go-to example for that is loons.
During the April to June breeding season, the birds’ territorial instincts allow little tolerance for other loons,
Warning displays are common and if they don’t work, loons will sometimes fight to the death to defend their chosen corner of a lake. Other waterfowl and even marine mammals aren’t treated as welcome neighbours either. More than a few governments whose policies and national aims fit the pejorative use of “loon” as a sobriquet. However, as autumn and the need to migrate to warmer climes to survive looms, the territorial imperative wanes.Groups ranging from half a dozen to scores begin what’s known as “rafting”, forming unified flocks for the southward migration.
Coincidentally, loons can fly as fast as 130 kilometers an hour.
THE HUMAN VERSION
Hundreds of thousand of Israelis have been in effect “rafting” for months on a regular basis, demanding a peace agreement that will bring home the remaining hostages (alive and bodies) held by Hamas in Gaza.
Not having the wherewithal of a loon to realise when common need overrules self and the political survival instinct, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and his religious zealot enablers cling to the misapprehension they can get through it all – and “win” — with aggressive postures and a lot of deaths on both sides.
The Hamas leadership seems to think, if that’s not overstating the case, that support from Iran and its other proxies, while the rubble that is Gaza is being reduced to dust and ravaged by disease, is a raft.
The fantasy is all the more reprehensible because if they tried being genuine nationalists and leaders instead of troglodytes, Hamas might see that at best it’s a bit of flotsam that won’t keep them afloat and in charge of whatever Gaza ends up being.
In the end, neither they nor the present Israeli government, will fare any better than a pair of loons thinking they can go it alone through a Canadian winter, and breed again in the spring.
AND ON THE CLIMATE FRONT
You don’t have to be a scientist to see that climate change is real and undeniable no matter how ignorant of facts you choose to be, or what politics you worship.
Nature is painting it in colour.The palette of leaves that is the quintessential signature of autumn in Cananda and the northeastern U.S., usually starts showing up a few weeks into September and peaks around Canadian Thanksgiving.
The photo on the left was taken a week beforeLabour Day, the first Monday in September that marks the unofficial .but widely held end of summer.
Granted, it’s only a couple of trees, and they’re probably stressed. The question is, why?
Experts cite extreme spring rainfall and hotter than usual summer days as determining factors in the arrival, duration and vibrancy or otherwise of this year’s fall spectacle.
HOPEFULLY NOT A SIGNAL
A tour company operating a cruise scheduled for Greenland and the Canadian Arctic later this ninth sent out a notice to its clients that in addition to the obvious cold weather gear, to include a “bug hat”.
The mesh head and neck covering is what people in this much more southerly part of the country often wear if they spend time outdoors in the spring, when the blackflies and mosquitoes are at their madness-inducing peak.
I sincerely hope it’s one of those “warnings” companies find it necessary to make to keep from being sued over “traumatic incidents” like bug bites, — the last thing you’d expect to suffer on atrip to see ice, polar bears and walruses.– and not another flashing danger light from Nature.
Considering they are, and have been from time immemorial perennial, heeding Nature’s signals may at this point send human capability.
But, as the legendary Norwegian explorer, oceanographer, statesman, and Nobel Peace Prize winner (1922) Fridtjof Nansen said in his inaugural address as Rector of the University of St Andrews, Scotland in 1925: “We all have a Land of Beyond to seek in our life—what more can we ask? Our part is to find the trail that leads to it.”
And in the case of our present travails, look for Nature’s signposts to guide us.
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