Tokeland

What begins well sometimes even ends well. Monday’s trip actually ended up on a high note as there was no fog and no high winds when we reached Tokeland around 6:30 PM. As a result, I actually got the best of the light of the day there.

One of my favorite shots of the day was this elegant Whimbrel,

Whimbrel

a bird we only see during migration, and only the second shot I’ve ever gotten of one. I wouldn’t have gotten this one if a more experienced birder hadn’t pointed it out to me as it was well camouflaged amid the flock of Marbled Godwits.

Of course, I couldn’t resist taking several pictures of the Marbled Godwits, even though I already have many shots taken during previous visits

Marbled Godwits

At the end of the day the sun was low enough in the sky that there was a Marbled Godwits were literally glowing in the sun, and I couldn’t help but be struck by the abstract beauty of the whole scene:

Godwits with Waves

Paying Your Dues

I thought our trip to Ocean Shores started rather auspiciously Monday when we were immediately greeted by this Marsh Hawk, Northern Harrier, who circled just above our heads and checked us out

Northern Harrier

and circle again almost at head height.

Northern Harrier

I’ll admit I was awed looking straight into her eyes, so I wasn’t too surprised when I turned around and most of the small birds that had been feeding on the edge of the tide had disappeared, even though Northern Harriers generally seem to feed on mice and other rodents, though Cornell says that they also take small birds, and occasionally even ducks.

We saw very few other birds the several hours we spent at Ocean Shores, despite considerable walking. After an hour or so trudging across sand dunes with nothing to show for my efforts, I felt a little like this shoe.

Boot on Post

Unwilling to admit we’d been skunked, we decided to check out Tokeland before heading back to Tacoma.

Gilbert’s The Great Fires

I just finished reading Jack Gilbert’s The Great Fires: Poems 1982-1992. Although it’s only 90 pages long, the book impressed me enough that I put two more of his books on my Amazon wish list even though I’m still not sure how much I agree with what he has to say.

Nor am I sure that I understand exactly what he is trying to say in his poetry. There are two very clear motifs running through this volume of poetry. The dominant motif, the one I most question, is clearly found in

MEASURING THE TYGER

Barrels of chains. Sides of beef stacked in vans.
Water buffalo dragging logs of teak in the river mud
outside Mandalay. Pantocrater in the Byzantium dome.
The mammoth overhead crane bringing slabs of steel
through the dingy light and roar to the giant shear
that cuts the adamantine three-quarter-inch plates
and they flop down. The weight of the mind fractures
the girders and piers of the spirit, spilling out
the heart’s melt. Incandescent ingots big as cars
trundling out of titanic mills, red slag scaling off
the brighter metal in the dark. The Monongahela River
below, night’s sheen on its belly. Silence except
for the machinery clanging deeper in us. You will
love again, people say. Give it time. Me with time
running out. Day after day of the everyday.
What they call real life, made of eighth-inch gauge.
Newness strutting around as if it were significant.
Irony, neatness and rhyme pretending to be poetry.
I want to go back to that time after Michiko’s death
when I cried every day among the trees. To the real.
To the magnitude of pain, of being that much alive.

Pittsburgh, and particularly its steel mills, is a major symbol in Gilbert’s poetry. It’s hard to dismiss the image of giant furnaces pouring out molten steel as a symbol of passion. And it’s those passionate feelings, both of love and of loss, that Gilbert seems to yearn for. Perhaps that’s not too unusual considering the number of hit songs written about falling in love or losing love. Would country western, much less the Blues, even exist without those themes? Although I wouldn’t question that there is a real sense of being “alive” in such moments, I would question whether that is “the real,” and the only real.

Strangely enough, another motif in Gilbert’s poetry can be found in this reaction to Michiko’s death:

ALONE

I never thought Michiko would come back
after she died. But if she did, I knew
it would be as a lady in a long white dress.
It is strange that she has returned
as somebody’s dalmatian. I meet
the man walking her on a leash
almost every week. He says good morning
and I stoop down to calm her. He said
once that she was never like that with
other people. Sometimes she is tethered
on the lawn when I go by. If nobody
is around, I sit on the grass. When she
finally quiets, she puts her head in my lap
and we watch each other’s eyes as I whisper
in her soft ears. She cares nothing about
the mystery. She likes it best when
I touch her head and tell her small
things about my days and our friends.
That makes her happy the way it always did.

For someone who wants to feel the “magnitude of pain,” the narrator seems remarkably fond of these quiet moments. Of course, it’s precisely these quiet moments that most appeal to me. Perhaps I’ve spent too many days alone with my Skye who greets me with joy when I return home from the Y, and then is usually content to lay with his head on my lap as I watch television. It’s hard to be quite as passionate as you used to be when you get older, and nothing seems quite as urgent as it did when you were young. The only thing you miss is youth itself.

Deja Vu, Day Two

As I pointed out in yesterday’s entry, I’ve spent the last few days focused on getting this blog back up to speed. And that served me well because after four weeks of uninterrupted sunshine it’s turned real wet around here. But things seemed to be looking up. I’d finally gotten the latest update to WordPress installed and felt good about that. The weather forecast called for a return to sunnier weather. So I’d planned on heading out to Belfair after I’d taken Skye for his morning walk.

I woke up to the sound of rain, heavy rain. The sky was so dark that there was no way I was going to drag my new lens outside. No Belfair. I wasn’t happy, but I figured if I’d managed to go months during the winter with rainy days I could manage to wait a couple days to get back outside.

The day got even darker, though, when I opened up my blog to find:

WordPress 2.8.4: Security Release

Yesterday a vulnerability was discovered: a specially crafted URL could be requested that would allow an attacker to bypass a security check to verify a user requested a password reset. As a result, the first account without a key in the database (usually the admin account) would have its password reset and a new password would be emailed to the account owner. This doesn’t allow remote access, but it is very annoying.

We fixed this problem last night and have been testing the fixes and looking for other problems since then. Version 2.8.4 which fixes all known problems is now available for download and is highly recommended for all users of WordPress.

Once you’ve had your blog infiltrated by spammers and porn sequestered away on your site, you’re not going to let something like that happen again. Since I’d already backed up my files the day before, I got brave and decided to push the auto upgrade button, but got an error message that a file couldn’t be uploaded. I figured with that strong of a warning there was probably a high demand on their servers so I waited awhile and tried the button again. This time it did upgrade, but, as usual, it managed to write over my theme and rendered In a Dark Time into a very bright whitespace. By now, it’s relatively easy to reload my theme, activate it and delete the two included themes. I’m sure there couldn’t have been more than a dozen or so visitors bothered by the upgrade.

Since I had already spent much of the morning working on my site, I decided to work on it a little more, specifically following some of the recommendations of Lyndi at Nice2all for providing better security for your WordPress site and generally making sure ite runs as smoothly and efficiently as possible. I’ve managed to flag several interesting articles from her site since I adopted her theme awhile ago. As I get time, I try to follow her advice and make the upgrades she suggests.

Her instructions are clear and specific enough that I’ve been able to carry out all but one of them so far. I still haven’t gotten brave enough to change the mySQL files through phpMyAdmin. My guess is that will never get done unless the WordPress developers offer a way to do it automatically. Luckily, I still get a kick out of poking around under the hood, particularly since I seldom end up with a face full of oil when I make a mistake. It’s a great way to rediscover those magical words that make the air glow and make others give you a wider than usual berth.