Following the Water: A Hydromancer's Notebook

Hardcover
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Author: David M. Carroll

ISBN-10: 0547069642

ISBN-13: 9780547069647

Category: United States History - Northeastern & Middle Atlantic Region

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The writer, naturalist, and artist David Carroll illuminates the ecology and life histories the tree frogs, hawks, foxes, and the increasingly rare wood and spotted turtles he has been tracking for decades with the precision and passion that won him a 2006 MacArthur "genius" award.Following theWater is the intensely observed chronicle of Carroll’s annual March-to-November wetlands immersion—from the joy of the first turtle sighting in March to the gorgeously described, vibrant trilling of tree frogs ("lichen with eyes") in late May to the ancient sense of love and loss Carroll experiences each autumn when it is time once again to part with open water.Illustrated with the author’s fine pen-and-ink drawings, Following theWater is a gorgeous evocation of nature, an utterly unique "admission ticket to a secret corner of the world" (Bill McKibben). Publishers Weekly In this sensuous nature journal, MacArthur "genius" award winner Carroll (The Year of the Turtle) follows the inhabitants of his local New Hampshire wetlands through a season of turtle life from March thaw, when the turtles wake from hibernation, to November, when ice puts them back to sleep, along the way celebrating such personal "holy days" as "the Return of the Red-winged Blackbird." Wearing camouflage and waders, he meets wildlife on its own terms. At the sudden appearance of a red doe, he wonders, "to have those senses-would I trade my thinking, dreaming, imagining mind for them for one full day... would I ever want to come back?" He watches a thirsty turtle hatchling encountering water for the first time: he "extends his neck full length, immerses his head, closes his eyes" and drinks for 21 minutes. Accompanied by Carroll's own exquisite drawings, this poetic recording of his season of loving observation is subdued by Carroll's dread of habitat destruction and nostalgia for a boyhood when "I entered waters that, if not alive themselves, were so filled with light and life that my binding with them was as much metaphysical as physical." (Aug.)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.