Central Park, the immediate nights before the NYC marathon is as quiet  as an Egyptian tomb.                                         
So quiet and empty was the park last night, it was  downright eerie.  
One almost expected Dracula or a USDA "field worker" to jump out of the  bushes.
I am not a fan of park crowds and have no intentions of trudging  to Central Park today to squeeze myself between thousands of  runners and cheering fans.
I normally see many dozens of runners and cyclists every  night. 
But, I guess one never quite appreciates anything until it actually goes  missing.
"Don't it always go to show,  that you don't know what you've got  'till its gone," Joni Mitchell sang.  
And yep, truer words have never been said -- or sung.
I and the ducks at Harlem Meer have been jumping the past two  nights at unseen ghosts, and (Wildlife Extermination Services) goblins -- though  it is past Halloween.
Of course, I don't know exactly why the mallards have been so weirded  out and spazzed.  I doubt its because they miss the joggers.
But, three different times they all suddenly bolted into the water  like nervous Chihuahuas on the Fourth of July.  And yet there  was absolutely nothing going on.
Perhaps the ducks were simply missing the geese.
The eight geese seen earlier in the week at Harlem Meer have not been seen  again.
Part of me wonders if the Goosebuster folks were around and that  is what in fact "spooked" the Harlem Meer mallards?
That, of course, sounds totally paranoid, mistrustful and absurd  considering all the downed trees this past week and the cleanup that had to  be done in the park.
But, absurdity seems to be the order for recent days. Bizarre  priorities, "euphemisms" and insanity seem to rule.
Walking home through the desolate eeriness of a park without joggers,  cyclists, the occasional dog walker, raccoon or (heaven forbid!) geese, I  thought about the "good old days."
The good old days of the past few years when one would look up in  awe at the sights and beautiful honking sounds of goose  "flyovers" zooming over the trees.
I can't remember the last time I saw or heard a goose flyover in  Central Park. Its got to be a number of months.
Arriving to and walking around an empty Reservoir, I remembered how  beautiful and alive the water used to look at night with the beautiful  forms of geese and mallards drawing long "Vs" as they glided  mystically through the water.
Last night, the Reservoir appeared like a still and glistening black  mirror. Nothing alive or moving on it.
Nor was there anyone jogging on the running path of the  Reservoir.
Any second now, a USDA henchman with a rocket net is gonna jump out of  the bushes!
I am not usually uneasy or weirded out when in the park at night. 
But, for some reason, I was last night.
Following the marathon, the runners and cyclists will again return to  the park next week.
But, the park will be anything but "normal."
I am still thinking about that letter from the USDA spokesperson the  other day.
Apparently, to the USDA, the "good ol' days" were 1970, when the resident  Canada geese in this country were fluttering on the brink of  extinction.
That is now the new "normal" we are creating again in 2011.
"Don't it always go to show, that you don't know what you've got till  its gone?
You play a pair of dice and put up a parking lot."  
Central Park at night, as quiet as an Egyptian tomb.
Without geese.  -- PCA
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Love your blogs. Question: What does one do about mallards flying into a residential swimming pool. It happens to me every spring and they make the pool unusable because of the mess in the pool and surrounding it. We live by a huge lake so why are they attracted to our pool, are they looking for a nesting site? I do have a little grassy area and a citrus tree that gives shade.
ReplyDeleteHi David,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the supportive comment.
Regarding your question about mallards taking up residence in the swimming pool over the spring, that is a little difficult to answer, not knowing exact circumstances.
How many mallards are you talking about? What sexes are they?
It could be they are seeking a quiet place for nesting, since you indicate there is grass and a nearby tree.
There apparently is a food source nearby and obviously water.
But, its unusual for mallards to be choosing a swimming pool, as the chlorine isn't usually appealing and a pool would lack duck weed.
Personally, I don't own a pool, so it is a hard question to answer. I have never seen a duck in the outdoor NYC pools -- even the pool at Harlem Meer.