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The Spring Campfire - a ritual

4/30/2017

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The Spring Campfire- a ritual

I love our Spring campfires! After a day’s work we sit above our pond, away from the house, and make a campfire. During the last couple of weeks, I have collected all the little branches that winter storms took down and put them where we make our fire. It is round and built out of field stones, with a wall that is open in the front. This way the fire is in a bowl and can be controlled easily.
We only make fires when there is no wind- which is usually at dusk. Absent large weather systems moving through the area, the air is most stable at dawn and dusk, when the heating effects of the sun on the landscape is at its minimum.
As the sun’s energy hits dark patches of dark green woods and lighter areas of fields of hay , etc., it creates thermal ‘elevators’ of warmer air rising up from the darker areas and drafts of cooler air sinking into the lighter areas. This is the system that allows our eagles and hawks to effortlessly soar high above, without barely flapping their wings. They are soaring on ‘thermals’ (those rising columns of air).
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We learned to observe this when we took ultralight flying lessons in the late 1980’s. If you are not familiar with these ‘aircrafts’, they were basically large lawnmower engines strapped into aluminium tube frames with nylon fabric for wings. It was very scary, but it gave us a great appreciation for what is involved in flight!
We would show up for our lessons and wait around dusk. Although the air felt tepid and still around us on the flight deck, the flight master had the final say. He was watching the leaves on the trees at the far end of the runway. If he could see a rippling of light green in the leaves, there would be no flights.
The bottom of tree leaves is much lighter green (it contains less chlorophyll) and so if lighter green was being shown, there was too much wind to fly! We would sit there - in the still air around us, and complain, but the reality was that the air above us was too turbulent. We had no way to know this other than the rising air the flight master could see percolating up through the leaves of the trees at the end of the runway - kind of like very sensitive windsocks! 

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​I eventually flew. It was terrifying and satisfying! I flew into an updraft (thermal) that shot me up several hundred feet unexpectedly - terrifying my partner. I managed to land on my own and that was the end of ultralights  for me. (However, I did move on to gliders).

But last weekend everything was perfect. We did not  have any wind and the ground was still cold, and kind of moist from rain the day before. Ideal for making a fire.
I am always eager to burn those thousands of little twigs and branches. Afterwards we can use their ashes to fertilize our fields and garden. I think it is a more natural way to do things.
Sitting around the campfire is a very special atmosphere.  You are outside, but warm from the fire, and you feel completely secure from animals. It might be in our DNA that we feel this way. We’ve been gathering and socializing around campfires for tens of thousands of years.
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Fire in this setting has such a relaxing influence on you. When you make your fires after sunset- in order to better see where the sparks are flying, you will unavoidably look at the sky which seems so near, and it  is so alive! Not only can you see the millions of stars, but also planes flying on their paths to their destinations.  With the exception of the stray small local plane, they all come from the same direction and use the ‘airplane highway’.

But the real 'stars' of the night sky are the billions of stars themselves in the vast Milky Way above. Watching them and the a few of the planets circle above, we wanted to know more about them. So we
downloaded the Sky Map App for our smart phones:
​
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.stardroid&hl=en

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Now we point our phones to the sky and after a second or two we see our stars on the display with their proper names. After a while we had learned to name at least the well-known stars without the help of technology!
A highlight for me is always to see a satellite moving through the night sky. You have to be patient and have good eyes to discover them and then track them.
Let me tell you, the night sky is a very lively place. ​

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Unfortunately, one thing has become conspicuously absent from our evening sky. Bats! Five years ago or so, we always watched bats wheeling above our pond. They were a welcome sight. Each bat can eat the equivalent of its own body weight in mosquitos each night. You can spot them easily because they do not fly like birds, as they use their echolocation capability to find their prey.  Their herky-jerky flight paths signaled a new dead mosquito with each twist and turn. We even installed a bat house at the far end of the pond to encourage their hunting close to the pond.
Unfortunately, a lot of bats have been lost due to the ‘white nose syndrome’, a white powdery fungus that has killed millions of them.  Last summer we saw only one bat over our pond. CBS reported the devestating effects in New York and offered a glimmer of hope that they will recover- http://www.cbsnews.com/news/bats-die-off-may-be-leveling-off/
I hope they will recover and do what they did in the past: eat all the mosquitoes that are around, as well as other pests that harm local crops. We hardly had mosquitoes, but now it is different.​

And of course there is the evening love fest that now appears in our pond each Spring! Each evening and well into the next morning, frogs arrive from all around to mate along the shallow edges. their rhythmic mating calls swelling in the still air. Their frantic couplings can be almost comical to watch as they pile into knotted balls around receptive females. 

Soon there will be scrums of tiny black tadpoles along the shallow edges and the small-mouth bass will have a new generation to sustain them. At least they are still plentiful here to do their bit in controlling the mosquitoes. The frogs’ worldwide decline is not evident in our pond yet. 
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So our ritual Spring fire gives us a chance to observe the new cycles of life in the land around us and take stock of what needs to be done this year. Making a spring campfire is useful and good for your own well being.
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    >This is about our journey from being Big City people to learning how to embrace a country lifestyle. 

    We bought an old farmhouse (built in the 1850's); we have hay fields and woods, streams, bridges and a long drive way. Our neighbors are far away. We are so far away that we have to go to the post office to get our mail. For us it has been paradise.

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