Another semester begins here at Miami University and there is the usual excitement and anticipation associated with the beginning of fall semester. The temperature even dropped ten degrees yesterday as if to concede that the summer is coming to a close. A generous concession at this point.
I am recently back from a two week vacation and sufficiently recharged to feel a little of that new-school-year excitement as I prepare for another semester of introductory biology with lots of freshman and others. Today was our first day of class and I shared a poem with the students called “Invitation” by Mary Oliver, one of the great living nature poets. It begins: Oh do you have time/ to linger/for just a little while/out of your busy//and very important day/for the goldfinches/that have gathered/in a field of thistles…
When she puts it that way you realize, yes I do. One of the things I love about Mary Oliver’s poetry is that she witnesses the goings on of the natural world and reminds you that you have the time to linger, to stare, and to listen. Ah, such hobbies. On my drive home, I watched a young student walking down the street with rather large head phones on her head. Fashion-wise, I didn’t really like the look; nature-wise, I worried she might miss the calls of the cicadas and wondered if she even saw the birds flying all around her. Sure, I like my folk my music and I understand that it’s nice to have a good beat to walk to. But, nature is now and it’s a shame to miss any more of it than necessary. Walking home or to class seems like the perfect time to witness our urban ecology.
With that thought, I came home, laid on our deck, and looked up. Near the top of one of the thinner branches, there was a robin’s nest secured in the maple. It has probably been there all summer, right above our heads apparently, and it was news to me. It made me want to Tweet like a bird in her nest. Hope you find something new and exciting in your backyard too.
I hope that at least a few of your students enjoyed Mary Oliver! With summer ending and as the one who is not directly returning to school this fall (I'll be a substitute teacher on a few occasions in a high school marine biology course and my boyfriend is back to the books as a new grad student), I'm taking time in my own little "sabbatical" to enjoy having free time. Now that I can't use summer as an excuse any more, I'll be updating my blog more regularly as well, hopefully finding some great science-y things to highlight from my new backyard. :)
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