SPRING 2024

tulip leaf spring

Arboretum Archive

E-pistles

North End Map

Calvert Vaux Park

View current page
...more recent posts

January 6, 2004

Epiphany

Poised upon the New Year.
Looking back and looking forward.
The last day of the Holiday Season is a time for revelation.
Or at least for recognition.

As the Arboretum enters a fifth year I realize that this one must be different. When I started this page, in the Fall of 1999, I promised some sort of nature reports from Central Park for at least a year. I’m not even quite sure what I was thinking of - probably something more like an almanac - but the practice evolved in its own way, and has extended far beyond the original guarantee.

I came to believe that the Park, protean and multifaceted, could provide a focus, some point of reference, for whatever it was that I wished to say, and that submitting my intent to such a stricture should prove a profitable exercise. In this faith I have not been disappointed, though the discipline may have been more interesting to me than to my readers.

My original interest was in the trees, and in learning such wisdom as plants might have to offer. Such a study will naturally be guided by the seasons, which are often reflected in the holidays we humans have established. Ultimately, those dates became my deadlines, and my minimum requirements for writing. As with the Park, I found in each Holiday a reservoir of possibility, guided by an over-arching theme.

Meditation on the Holidays is ultimately a spiritual practice, or at least it can be. They are repositories of meaning, expressing continuities of our experience in the World; they structure our lives, whether we “like” them or not. I was led to the Holidays because many are rooted in ancient seasonal observances, and for a complimentary reason I found it necessary to give modern additions to the cannon the same consideration.

I have treated the Holidays, and the Park, as a sort of mystical fount, or horn of plenty: an inexhaustible source of manifold gifts, replenished as fast as they are harvested. It’s a vision that has enriched my life, but it is a vision of eternity, and our time is briefer. So it is that people have a need to sum up from time to time, and I realize that this is such a time for me.

This Year promises to bring change to me. Doing something about my unemployment is apt to become an overriding concern, and other commitments may have to defer to this basic survival need. As such, I’m not sure how much I can promise this time around, but my intent regarding the Holidays is to revisit the past posts and try to come to some conclusions.
Beyond that, I will write as I can, when I can, and on such topics as compel me, whether within or outside of the walls of Central Park. I realize that, in the end, you may not even notice any difference, but to me, it should be a revelation.

[link] [1 ref]

January 5, 2004

The Twelfth Day of Christmas


[link]

January 4, 2004

The Eleventh Day of Christmas


[link]

January 3, 2004

The Tenth Day of Christmas


[link]

January 2, 2004

The Ninth Day of Christmas


[link]

January 1, 2004

The Eighth Day of Christmas

is also New Year’s Day.
[link]

December 31, 2003

The Seventh Day of Christmas


[link] [1 ref]

December 30, 2003

The Sixth Day of Christmas


[link]

December 29, 2003

The Fifth Day of Christmas


[link]

December 28, 2003

The Fourth Day of Christmas


[link]

December 27, 2003

The Third Day of Christmas


[link]

December 26, 2003

The Second Day of Christmas


[link]