Rain, rain, and more rain. How well I remember the dry summers of years gone by. You won’t hear me complain.
There is something about moisture from the sky that no watering by hand or hose can replicate. Throw in a bit of lightning and thunder, and the world is suddenly a greener place. That something is the nitrogen-called “poor man’s fertilizer” by some-that results from the wonderful chemistry of our atmosphere.
Another result from all the rain has been a full-to-the-brim wet area in our backyard. My husband and his tractor created it when I complained that he had filled in an area where the cedar waxwings were coming for mud to make nests. Not far from that spot he dug out another bowl-like area about 10 inches deep at the base of a natural spring.
The original builders of our house must have thought the natural springs on this property a sign of good farming land. According to the history of our town, the original householder to live here had water for his cattle because of at least one of those springs, even in dry times.
This water has always drained into a culvert and further on down into the Rocky Branch of the Asquamchumauke (Baker) River. It still does, but now it stays for a time in a small, six-foot-in-diameter pond, a rain-garden by definition, design and default.
We did this in late fall. Winter followed and we waited. The little pond froze over, and snow fell on it and buried it. Then spring arrived, and time reversed itself: first the snow left, then the ice melted.
Then the frogs arrived. First, the peepers and their repetitive medley of hope, followed by birds swooping for water and mud for nest building: tree swallows, goldfinches, bluebirds, robins. Grasses with arching stems grew about and flowered over the pond. Then, the green frogs and their profound harrumphing chorus. The calendar of nature’s sounds.
Over April vacation, the grandkids and I experimented: Could a dozen goldfish survive the summer and eat mosquito larvae? There was some discussion and the pessimists among us hypothesized the fish weren’t long for the pond; the optimists prevailed.
So far, five stalwart survivors remain. Every day I check, and every day they rise to the surface around one in the afternoon, swirling and swooping, swimming in choreographed motion and military-like maneuvers. When the grandkids come over, they shake some feed into the water, but mostly the fish fend quite nicely for themselves. Later on, the fish return to the shade close under the bank and wait, perhaps for another optimal time to surface, to rest, to meditate.
One day, I observed a crow who perhaps thought the goldfish looked like a protein-rich meal for her noisy brood hopping about in our side yard. She flew over and landed on the far side of the pond. Instantly, the fish hid from view. She crooked her head to get a better view, but vanished they had. The crow paced about for a bit and left in what seemed like a huff.
A weekend ago, as two of my grandkids helped me work on creating a woodland garden, we discovered what else might be attracted by water: dragonflies. The first one I saw was a super-sized beauty with a lovely blue tail. I have not spotted that one again, but many others of varied hues and sizes zoomed back and forth as we worked.
Eleven-year-old Liam seemed the natural candidate to help spread wood chips. His idea to drag over a child-size garden bench made the area seem even more defined. His sister, Julia, 8, her creative juices flowing, designed a sign proclaiming “Nana’s Garden” with an arrow, in case anyone couldn’t find it on their own. She added colorful bees and butterflies just in case the real ones buzzing and flitting about needed encouragement.
A note of caution: I never leave my younger grandchildren unsupervised around this area. Water is tantalizing to children. Watching frogs, yes! Doing it alone, no!
Work remains to be done. I’d like to make some cement stepping stones with the kids. Six should do it.
Every day I wonder, are the fish and frogs still there? One day, I penned this haiku.
frog looks up at me
from his watery puddle
plop! Green legs pump fast
By Helen Downing, UNHCE Master Gardener

