By Kit Carlson
You could hear them calling, cries reverberating between black November treetops and low-hanging pewter clouds. Reedy honks, voices from the far north, warning of winter. “Geese! Geese!” my sister and I would shout, watching the ragged check mark of their flight formation coming over the trees. This was long ago, when Canada geese had been overhunted nearly to extinction, before they became ubiquitous on suburban lawns and golf course greens. In the mid-1960s, geese were still rare in mid-Michigan, appearing overhead in late fall like a sacred visitation.
We’d grab the bag of soft, white Wonder Bread, and run, open jackets flying. The flock would ride the water right where our backyard fell into the cold silver sheen of Green Lake. Two dozen birds floated, necks high and straight, white chin patches decorating soft black faces. They hopped ungainly onto shore, crowding us as we threw hunks of bread, our next week’s lunch. Their necks curved, their bills snapped, then a male, annoyed, charged. We charged in turn, unfurling our jackets and flapping him back. Offended, the flock bumbled to the lake edge and heaved great splashes into dark water.
Soon enough, they would be gone, the dried lumps of their leavings erased under the first snowfall. Soon enough, the season would turn, and turn, and turn again. Almost sixty turns–so many now, that I have nearly forgotten that day, that shift between autumn’s death and winter’s birth, heralded by cries of geese and shouts of little girls.
Kit Carlson is an Episcopal priest and a life-long writer with work appearing in publications as diverse as Seventeen Magazine and Anglican Theological Review. She has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and for Best of Short Fictions, and has recently published in EcoTheo Review, River Teeth, Rooted 2: An Anthology of the Best Arboreal Nonfiction, Wrong Turn Lit, and Burningword Literary Journal, among others. She lives in East Lansing, Michigan, with her husband Wendell, and Lola, a nervous rescue dog.
Image by Josh Massey courtesy of Unsplash
Wonderful imagery and sound from before and after!
Beautiful, Kit. I can hear and feel those wild things, “flying south for the winter.”
You had me at ‘black November treetops and low-hanging pewter clouds.” I too, had “nearly forgotten that day”, so thank you Kit for bringing me back to a wonderful childhood memory. Your words are beautiful.
Migrating geese has been for me a never ending source of inspiration.. and you conjure up the image or them magnificently. Thank you.
“of” not “or”– typo correction
This moment is especially alive along Lake Champlain, the 120 mile long flyway the runs north-south and guides the geese and so many other birds on their way. Thanks for the evocation.
And to think in Michigan this year, we are culling them because there are so many. Sad.
GREAT WRITING! Plus, i appreciated learning that they were almost extinct in the 1960’s, something i’d forgotten, Loved and the image of you running toward the attacking male and flapping back with your open coat! Thank you.
loved the unique and vivid descriptions in this essay. it will linger long in my mind, long after I slap down the screen. And I will recall it once again when I gaze up at my own pewter skies and see my own ragged check mark flock.
I appreciate your strong, vivid writing.
I loved the wonder and joy of rushing to the geese and the finely drawn details of their appearance and movements. Thank you!
What a fun memory! Thanks for sharing so eloquently.
Beautifully written!