Showing posts with label sea beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea beach. Show all posts

Monday, June 19, 2017

A walk on the beach.

June 19
Piping Plover












Friday. Fog still, but I walk about a mile north onward on the beach. 

The sea is still running considerably. It is surprising how rapidly the water soaks into the sand, and is even dried up between each undulation. 

The sand has many holes in it, about an eighth of an inch over, which seem to have been made by the beach-flea. These have a firm and as if artificial rim or curb, and it is remarkable that the waves flow two or three feet over them with force without obliterating them. They help soak up the water. 

As I walk along close to the edge of the water, the sea oscillating like a pendulum before me and each billow flowing with a flat white foaming edge and a rounded outline up the sand, it reminds me of the white toes of blue-stockinged feet thrust forward from under the garments in an endless dance. 

It is a contra-dance to the shore. Some waves flow unexpectedly high and fill my shoes with water before I am aware of it. It is very exciting for a while to walk where half the floor before you is thus incessantly fluctuating. 

There is frequently, if not for the most part, a bar just off the shore on which the waves first break and spend more or less of their violence, and I see that the way to land in a boat at such a time would be to row along outside this bar and its breakers, till you came to an opening in it, then enter and row up or down within the bar to a comparatively safe place to land. 

I turn up the first hollow. A piping plover peeps around me there, and feigns lameness, — though I at first think that she is dusting herself on the sand, — to attract me away from her nest evidently. 

Return inland. The poverty-grass is fully out, in bright-yellow mounds or hillocks, more like painted clods than flowers, or, on the bare sandy hills and plains of the Cape, they look like tufts of yellow lichens on a roof. They indicate such soil as the cladonia lichen with us. If the soil were better they would not be found there. 

These hillocks are about as big as a large ant-hill — some have spread to eight or ten feet in diameter, but are flat and broken more or less — and commonly dead in the middle or perhaps one side, but I see many perfect dense hemispheres of yellow flowers.  As the sand gathers around them, they rise above it, and they seem to bloom and flourish better when thus nearly buried in sand. A hemisphere eighteen inches in diameter would rest flat on the surface for six inches in width on the outside and be rather loosely rooted in the middle, for you could easily lift it all up. 

The Hudsonia ericoides is the most common, and the tomentosa appears  to be less in hillocks, i. e. more broken and dead. 

The poverty-grass emits a common sweetish scent as you walk over the fields. It blossoms on the edges first. You meet with it in Plymouth as you approach the peculiar soil of the Cape.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, June 19, 1857

A piping plover peeps around me there, and feigns lameness . . . See  July 11, 1857  ("The piping plover, as it runs half invisible on the sand before you, utters a shrill peep on an elevated key (different birds on different keys) . . ."); July 11, 1855 ("See young piping plover running in a troop on the beach . . .."); July 7, 1855 ("The piping plover running and standing on the beach.")

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Yellow butterflies in the damp road.

September 3.

September 3, 2023

Fair weather and a clear atmosphere after two days of mizzling, cloudy, and rainy weather and some smart showers at daylight and in the night. The street is washed hard and white. 

P. M. —- With Minot Pratt into Carlisle.

Woodbine berries purple. 

Even at this season I see some fleets of yellow butterflies in the damp road after the rain, as earlier. 

Pratt showed me a tobacco flower, long and tubular, slightly like a datura. 

In the meadow southwest of Hubbard's Hill saw white Polygala sanguinea, not described.

Close to the left-hand side of bridle-road, about a hundred rods south of the oak, a bayberry bush without fruit, probably a male one. 

It made me realize that this was only a more distant and elevated sea-beach and that we were within reach of marine influences. My thoughts suffered a sea-turn.

North of the oak (four or five rods), on the left of the bridle-road in the pasture next to Mason’s, tried to find the white hardback still out, but it was too late. 

Found the mountain laurel out again, one flower, close sessile on end of this year’s shoot. There were numerous blossom-buds expanding, and they may possibly open this fall.

A white hardback out of bloom by a pile of stones (on which I put another) in Robbins’s field, and a little south of it a clump of red huckleberries.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, September 3, 1854

Even at this season I see some fleets of yellow butterflies in the damp road after the rain, as earlier. See July 26, 1854 ("Today I see in various parts of the town the yellow butterflies in fleets in the road, on bare damp sand, twenty or more collected within a diameter of five or six inches in many places . . . I do not know what attracts them thus to sit near together , like a fleet in a haven; why they collect in groups.") See also July 14, 1852 ("See to-day for the first time this season fleets of yellow butterflies in compact assembly in the road”); July 16, 1851 ("I see the yellow butterflies now gathered in fleets in the road, and on the flowers of the milkweed"); July 19, 1856 ("Fleets of yellow butterflies on road.");  October 18, 1856 (“I still see a yellow butterfly occasionally zigzagging by the roadside”); October 20, 1858 ("I see yellow butterflies chasing one another, taking no thought for the morrow, but confiding in the sunny day as if it were to be perpetual.") and A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Yellow Butterflies

September 3.  See A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, September 3

Again see fleets of 
yellow butterflies in the 
damp road after rain.

A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau
 "A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality."
 ~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx ©  2009-2024

https://tinyurl.com/hdt-540903

Popular Posts Last 30 Days.

The week ahead in Henry’s journal

The week ahead in Henry’s journal
A journal, a book that shall contain a record of all your joy.
"A stone fruit. Each one yields me a thought." ~ H. D. Thoreau, March 28, 1859


I sit on this rock
wrestling with the melody
that possesses me.