Sometimes the sun, the stars and a
blood red moon align
to create a perfect day for taking a walk in the woods, and sometimes you’re
lucky enough to be in Maine when that happens. Last Sunday I was blessed with
the opportunity to hike up Morse Mountain with my true love. Even though Joe and I have owned our home in
Bath for two years, we didn’t know about Phippsburg’s hidden gem, The
Bates-Morse Mountain Conservation Area, until a few months ago when my
Wednesday morning coffee friends suggested we “take a hike!” and raved about
the views from Morse Mountain’s lofty overlook, which is halfway between the rod
iron gate at the beginning of the trail and Sewall Beach at the end of the
trail. My clever friends, however, did not elaborate on the many wonders we
would find at all of our stopping points along the way. When you walk among birch trees and tall
pines, it’s nature's beauty that fills us with hope, and when you’re
surprised it’s twice as powerful!
As we drove along
Small Point Road on that spectacular September day, we almost passed by Morse
Mountain Road. With only an ordinary, blue street sign to mark its existence,
it’s a miracle that we spotted it in time to turn left and proceed to the small
parking lot less than a quarter mile up the road. Miraculously, Joe and I
pulled into the second to last available spot at 1:15 in the afternoon. Clearly,
we were not the only couple who wanted to spend a glorious Sunday outdoors
breathing in Maine’s apple crisp air. Hoping to catch every ray of sunshine, we
immediately set off down the paved road with our trail map in hand, and our
snacks and camera tucked inside our red backpack, which Joe bought for our
first hike together in 1977 when we were dating. A few minutes later, we came
to the first fork in the road, and I had to repeat Yogi Berra’s sage advice:
“When you come to a fork in the road, take it.” (I was and always will be a fan
of Yogi Berra.)
Less than a mile into
our four-mile hike, I snapped a picture of a whimsical birch tree. Whenever I
see a birch, I smile, and my mind’s eye turns back to my childhood. In the
presence of a birch, I see secret notes carefully handwritten on the back of a sheet
of white bark; I see miniature canoes artfully made to resemble native American,
birch canoes that used to glide smoothly along the rivers of the northeast, and
I see young boys swinging on branches like Robert Frost described in his poem, Birches. One solitary birch tree can
lift me up toward the sky and let me dance with the ospreys, humming birds, and
piping plovers. A forest filled with birches will transport me to another time
and space where everything seems all right. If only for a moment, the swinging
branch of a birch tree can steal all of my worries away. As a young student, Robert Frost’s poetry
encouraged me to play, explore, and live a more daring life. It’s funny how a walk in the woods on a
bright, sunny autumn day can make you see more clearly and reflect on all
the choices you have made.
In Birches, Frost describes the immeasurable
value of a playful, white tree in a serious, green forest:
When I see birches bend to left and
right
Across the lines of straighter darker trees,
I like to think some boy's been swinging them.
But swinging doesn't bend them down to stay.
Ice Storms do that…
So was I once myself a swinger of
birches.
And so I dream of going back to be.
It's when I'm weary of considerations,
And life is too much like a pathless wood
Where your face burns and tickles with the cobwebs
Broken across it, and one eye is weeping
From a twig's having lashed across it open.
I'd like to get away from earth awhile
And then come back to it and begin over.
May no fate willfully misunderstand me
And half grant what I wish and snatch me away
Not to return. Earth's the right place for love:
I don't know where it's likely to go better.
I'd like to go by climbing a birch tree,
And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk
Toward heaven, till the tree could bear no more,
But dipped its top and set me down again.
That would be good both going and coming back.
One could do worse than be a swinger of birches.
|
View of Small Point from Morse Mountain's overlook |
Joe and I snapped a
dozen pictures of birch trees as we followed the path to Morse Mountain’s
scenic overlook. They were simply irresistible. The hike should take no more than two hours, but we wanted to stay and
play longer. Luckily, we met a friendly
couple, not unlike ourselves, and they offered to take our
picture. It’s rare to see Joe and I in the same photo, especially when the
backdrop is towering pine trees! Our fellow hikers directed our attention to
Mount Washington on the distant horizon. We were astonished, and Joe told our
new acquaintances that he had attended high school in New Hampshire and had
climbed Mount Washington many times. When we asked the couple where they went to
high school, the woman told us that she was born in Bath, but her family
had moved while she was still in grammar school. As fate and Bath would have it,
she and her husband both had lived on Long Island in New York at different
times, and I had lived there, too, but now we all call Maine our home. We marveled over the random connections four strangers could make, and then we
went our separate ways, but first we snapped a dozen more pictures, so we could
long remember the view from the top: the winding Sprague River, the peaceful
beach at Small Point, the dense green foliage, the bright blue sky and Mount
Washington in far away New Hampshire!
|
View of the Bates-Morse Mountain Conservation Area |
A car passed us when
we returned to the main road to continue our hike to Sewall Beach. At first, we
were surprised, but then we realized we were on a private road near the home of
the St. John family, the founders of the conservation area. Today, Bates College
and the Small Point Association cooperate with The Nature Conservancy and the
Maine Audubon Society to preserve the plants, wildlife and natural communities
that inhabit the area, including the nesting sites of piping plovers and least
terns, both endangered species of birds which nest on the bare sand. Bates College is conducting environmental
research throughout the 600 acres that are framed by the Sprague River, the
Morse River and the upland edge of Sewall Beach.
|
Sewall Beach |
When we finally stepped on to
Sewall Beach, one hour after beginning our afternoon trek, we were greeted by a
crystal clear view of the lighthouse on Seguin Island, one of my favorite
places in all of Maine. It was low tide, and the white sand stretched out for as far as we could see. The sea breeze was hitting our faces with a
good punch, so we decided to look for shelter between some large rocks. When we
found a sweet spot for two, Joe took out an apple from our old backpack and
began to slice it with his antique pocketknife. He handed me every other slice;
I felt so loved. As I looked out on the beach, I spied a young couple chasing
each other across the sand. He caught her; she touched his chest with her hand;
he lifted her into the salty air and spun her around; she threw her head back
and laughed; he set her back down; she tossed her hair; he took off his
baseball cap and stole a kiss, and then she grabbed his hand, and they started
to run back toward the wooded path. Sunday afternoons have always been perfect for
a date in the woods.
|
The salt marsh at Sprague River |
Before leaving the
Bates-Morse Mountain Conservation Area, Joe and I paused to gaze for a while at
the flat salt marsh, which seemed to expand infinitely from the edge of the woods.
The Sprague River divided into scores of small veins in front of our eyes, and
the water flowed and glistened through all of them. I thought I saw a hawk fly
overhead; Joe thought he saw an eagle, and we both thought of our dear friend,
Bill, who was killed in a car crash recently in Oaxaca, Mexico on his way to
witness the late summer bird migration. Bill was a quintessential bird watcher
and nature lover. A former Peace Corps volunteer, Special Forces Army veteran,
and Chicago architect, Bill retired to Oaxaca about ten years ago to watch
birds, cultivate gardens and support local artisans. Our friendship spanned
thirty years, and within those years our appreciation for art, nature and
philanthropy multiplied by thirty! Next Friday we will celebrate Bill’s life at
a memorial service in Chicago. Our daughter, Katie, will sing a selection of
Bill’s favorite Mozart arias and popular songs. The two that will make me cry
are Come to my Garden from The Secret Garden and Somewhere Over the Rainbow from The Wizard of Oz ( The book by L. Frank Baum, which inspired the musical, was
actually written in Chicago in the Fine Arts Building where Bill had his
office.) Joe and I had hoped to show Bill and his wife Mary, who is also our
cherished friend, the amazing beauty of Maine’s mid-coast. If Bill had been
given more time, I know he would have enjoyed identifying the countless birds
that fly over us in Maine. Lifted up on an eagle’s wing, he is flying with the
angels now.
Upon leaving Morse
Mountain at four o’clock in the afternoon, Joe and I were unusually quiet. We
tend to talk a lot. Well, I tend to talk a lot, and Joe seems to be genuinely
listening most of the time. Truth be told, the natural beauty of God’s creation
has a peaceful, calming effect on most souls. It’s good to take a walk through
the woods and swing on the branch of a birch tree. That branch can carry us up
to the heights of heaven and gently set us down on earth again to live more fully
and love more dearly.
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