Monday, December 19, 2011

December cattails


A December Canoe trip thoughts on the amazing cattail and other ecology


Anne Dillard writes that she takes walks to keep an eye on things. So, to check up on the lake on a unexpectedly mild still day of subdued soft sunshine in mid December I went for a short canoe trip along the shore. I pulled out on a patch of gravel and went ashore to inspect a small wetland that we call The Swale. It's mostly full of woody shrubby button bush but here and there a few cattail spikes had managed to establish. Possibly they took root last year when the water levels were low enough to expose more mud than usual in the Swale. A very faint barely detectable south wind was filtering up the length of the brown and gold swamp. The low winter noonday sun back lit the cattail spikes as they spread their seed. The silent flight of countless tiny sparks of life brought all kinds of thoughts profound and otherwise to mind. The fuzzy seed heads shone brightly, like incandescent torches against the dark background as they released streams and clots and clumps of seed. The bits of fluff looked like sparks off a July Fourth sparkler.


How many? A multitude. A vast swarm. A blizzard. An uncountable quantity. A number too great to even consider. Life flowed past me constantly. Some would go on to found dynasties and cattail empires of their own in a ditch or pond somewhere. Most would soon land on the lake's cold placid surface to expire. Strange to think how full of life the air usually is. Pollen grains, tiny seeds. Spider silk, midges, spores and cysts, they're all up there, like the plankton in the Gulf of Maine I once studied. We just don't see all that aerial plankton being sent aloft during the growing season by all sorts of reproductive plant and animal apparatus hard at work distributing new life.


On this mild still winter day the thought of all that life around me unseen was oddly comforting.


When I got back ashore I asked Google how many seeds are in a cattail head. About 300,000. And How many stalks per acre? About 86,000. So a one acre marsh can crank about 25 billion plus potential cattails. I think I'll stop right there with the cattails.


for the rest of the ecology check the log on line at silverwaters.com