Tom Stock

Poet, Essayist, Photographer, Naturalist

Taking The First Step

There are several smaller steps to be taken before the first step. When I planned a backpacking trip, thinking was the first step. That process included where, when, how, why, and what. After all the preparation, the expectation of shouldering pack and taking the first step finally happens. It’s a step of intention, will power, and hope. There is built-in insurance but still the possibility that anything could happen to spoil the planning and preparation.

Why all the fuss? Many of the hikes are only going to take a few hours. Yet, after the first step, there’s a sense of relief. Just follow the blazes and enjoy nature. It takes a lot of effort to escape the hustle-bustle, the noise, the chaos of daily routines. A sense of satisfaction results with the first step and a sigh of relief. The first step is medicine. Once I step out, a holistic feeling of “this is good for me.” kicks in. I’m on my way to sanity and better health.

Notes From the Garlic Shed – Homecoming Farm

A heavy downpour forces the harvest to pause. A few remain in the fields but from my point of view, I only see green rows of leafy vegetables. I have moved into the garlic shed to continue work with the Sicilian Red soft neck garlic. Farmer Don asked me to cut the stalks, brush off excess soil, and trim the roots. I had 8 trays to process.

I heard thunder with raindrops pelting on the new metal roof. A sense of isolation felt good. I was alone with my favorite job on the farm in the garlic shed, almost a shrine to me. One clap of thunder that seemed to be right overhead caught my attention. I looked out and saw a yellow jacket at the far end of a row. It was Don bending over, checking the progress of one of the crops. I taste a clove and instantly feel the burn of fresh garlic.

My hands have developed their own intelligence as I handle the bulbs. After a few years of working with garlic, I can process a bulb with hardly a glance. As a result, my hands have become stronger. Overhead, bunches of garlic hang on wires to cover the entire ceiling. What could be worse than having a cloak of garlic surrounding me. It’s a slow process and the 8 trays I have been assigned takes a few hours. And when I look up, I see job security. There’s plenty more bulbs to hold and peel and trim.

At the end of the season in mid November, Don gifted me with a bunch of garlic bulbs that had been scarred when they were dug. This is like getting free medicine. Back home, I skinned all the cloves, put then in olive oil in a jar. I was able to use this garlic until February. Once it was gone, I felt empty.

Manorville Hills Hike

A “Mack” truck greeted me in the parking lot of the Manorville Hills County Park. Mack is Mark’s pet dog, a look alike for the shiny silver ornaments on trucks of the same name. Mark often takes Mack on his walks. “He can keep up for miles” boasts mark.
We headed out on the Paumanok Path following nice, fresh white rectangular blazes. An overcast sky took the glare away producing a soft, intense green shrub layer, and crusty brown barky trunks of pitch pine and gray of oaks.
We stopped at a meadow to check out one of the five benches I made and brought into the park. A path had been mowed to the bench adding to its charm. The flood of light and opening in the forest prompted Mark to comment “This would be a good place for a house.”

Hawley Lake – Walk

Both Babylon and Islip Towns have cut brush along the eastern and western edges of Hawley’s Lake making it possible to take a half-mile walk. Three problems arise:

1. The noise of traffic on north and southbound Route 231
2. There is no nearby parking. Road crossings are busy.
3. Poison ivy grows in profusion along the chain-link fence on the Islip side.

Starting from the concrete pool below the falls, we will proceed to walk counter-clockwise to the right. The double concrete tunnel carries Sampawams Creek three hundred feet under Montauk Highway.There, sweetwater becomes brackish.

Estuary – Sampawams Creek: Fresh and Salt Water Meet

While I taught science, I fell in love with the Nissequogue River, a few blocks from where I lived. Eventually I turned my enthusiasm into a book titled THE NISSEQUOGUE: A JOURNEY. As a naturalist, I started the project by exploring. This led to research and interviews, historical information, old maps, etc.

During one of my final teaching years, I had one horrible day in the classroom when everything went wrong. I recall a helpless feeling. During that moment, I imagined myself having a sail boat on the Great South Bay. This has come true and it opened up my curiosity about Sampawams Creek. The result has been a love affair, a David and Goliath story. This creek is an underdog and I love to root for the underdog.

I moved to Babylon Village after marrying Nancy Keating. She owns a home across the street from Sampawams Creek. I can see Southards Boat Yard from an upstairs window. One day, an old 1929 bay boat showed up in the yard. It had sunk in the creek. Mike, the owner, purchased it, rescued it, and restored it. I watched the process with interest While I was sketching the boat, that classroom dream kicked in.

Interview With Darrel Ford – The Hempstead Plains

What he remembers of his visits to the Hempstead Plains
May 14, 2015

85 year old Darrel Ford, of Babylon Village, recalls his experiences exploring the Hempstead Plains in the 1940’s. He was a young teenager during the early 1940’s:

“There were several horse liveries at the edges. I’d hire a horse and ride for miles. Sometimes the grass was three feet high. I had the feeling that I was out west. There was no Levittown so to me as a young boy the area seemed huge.I was told that there were a lot of cattle before I first visited. I remember prairie warblers, bobolinks, upland plovers, there were hardly any people. I rarely saw another person. There were panoramic views of the sky with no buildings what so ever. I was told that the Indians burned the area and that led to the exclusion of trees and shrubs. The place was untouched by plow. One of the strangest comments I read is: “It ceased to excite the wonder of residents and travelers.”

He recalled black eye-d Susan, wild indigo, blue vervain, blueberries and blackberries, and birds foot violets.

“I used to see smoke in the distance.” It meant that there were brush fires on the plains in the early ‘40’s”

Beauty – Sampawams Creek

“It was a beautiful stream.” E-mailed John Burnley, nature photographer from Riverhead. Of course, beauty is in the eye of the beholder so John’s statement is debatable.

Our local Native Americans were surrounded by beauty and perhaps didn’t think of the creek that way. They saw the creek as a route of passage to their winter quarters in Dix Hills. Their idea of beauty was the rich food resources and clean fresh water it provided.

I venture to say that today, there are not many places where the public have the opportunity to experience its beauty. Hawley Lake certainly qualifies. As a village park, it is caught between Route 231. Besides the dam and falls at its southernmost end, there is a trail around the lake with a few observation points. During the summer, Hawly Lake has a profusion of white lily pads, swans, and Canada geese.

A Visit To Gardiners County Park

I decided to honor the first stanza of Mary Oliver’s poem titled HOW I GO TO THE WOODS:

“Ordinarily I go to the woods alone,
with not a single friend,
for they are all smilers and talkers, and therefore unsuitable.”

I grabbed my camera, note pad and drove to Gardiners County Park. I found a way to avoid the pets and pet walkers. I’ll take lesser-used trails or bushwhack. This was a last minute decision. I could wander as I please and, pause when I felt like it.

Litter

litter
Splotches on sacred ground / a passing vehicle / tossed out a window / accidentally dropped by a walker / it doesn’t belong / put it on your dresser, kitchen table, bathroom cabinet / it dishonors our ultimate Mother, with a capitol M – our planet / It is disrespect / Intrudes on what we ought to see, namely beautiful, uninterrupted landscape / it desecrates / where is there a cigarette butt-free place? / the punishment? / nothing / litter piles up under signs that say $100 fine for littering./ the sign doesn’t care / will the girl scouts will solve this problem? / no, they know better / who picks up our litter? / Minimum security county prisoners out on Sunrise Highway with orange bags and pointed sticks? / It’s a form of low grade terrorism / “Let the goats eat it” He says when I confront him / all litter is my litter / garbage, crap / call it what you will / I call it shit!
Litter is too nice a word / look at that…it’s such a shame…why do people do that?” aha, I’ve got one; they just threw a Wendy’s bag out the window. I’m going after them / I shout YOU LITTERED STOP PICK IT UP STOP YOU IDIOT. / he speeds away and I get me a middle- finger / fast forward
technology comes to the rescue / in each cigarette a hidden microchip to trace butt flippers / the Marlboro box warns: DO NOT BUTT FLIP – A FINE/COMMUNITY SERVICE/ JAIL TIME FOR OFFENDERS. – that’s bull shit he mumbles and flips his butt / a minute later, a litter patrol officer confronts him / he knows the time, the name has a photo/and genetic information that proves beyond the shadow of a doubt / a positive identification / a butt flipper has been apprehended / citation issued / appear before the judge / “You are charged with butt flicking” this crime carries a punishment of 40 hours of community service bending over picking up litter or a $350 fine” / we have uncontestable evidence, how do you plead? Guilty or not guilty? “but but but Judge, It was only an itty, bitty cigarette butt.” / if you plead not guilty, you either hire a lawyer or we appoint a lawyer, fee $1,000. How do you plead?” “Guilty” / since this is you first offence, I sentence you to 25 hours of community service.”
“I suggest you quit smoking.” See the clerk. Next

Dwarf Pine Barrens Hike

Mark, John, any me met at Sunrise Highway and Route 31. John wanted to show us a section we knows about that he calls “the pure” dwarf pines. These are true dwarf trees. “This is the last stand of the pure trees. All the others areas have changed. With no fires, tall trees have grown within the dwarf pines.” John wanted to see this last stand before it too changes. “Without fire the dwarf forest will cease to exist.” This is one more example of how human species have changed the delicate balances of the natural world. I suspect that Long Island is the capitol of examples of damaged habitats

John brought a pair of loppers to clear overhanging branches. He is preparing to pay several visits to this area to photograph the beauty and strangeness of the dwarf pines.

Page 28 of 30

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén