As the Cable Natural History Museum enters its fiftieth
year in existence, we find ourselves pausing to remember the past as well as
dream for the future. In particular, I find pleasure in contemplating the
legacy of Lois Nestel, the founding naturalist, director, and curator of the
Cable Natural History Museum. Lois was a talented, self-taught naturalist,
artist, and taxidermist. Examples of her accomplishments populate every corner
of our modern museum building. Her legacy is strong in the work that we do.
I never met Lois, but every Friday I feel a particular
kinship with her as I send my “Natural Connections” article off to the
newspapers. Lois initiated the tradition of a weekly nature column provided by
the Museum, and did so with a gentle, reverent, poetic style. Her column was
titled “Wayside Wanderings,” and the articles were compiled into two small
volumes in 1975.
One of my favorite authors, Sigurd Olson, provided the
introduction to Lois’s first volume. In his characteristic style, Sigurd wrote:
“With the eyes of a naturalist, artist, and poet, season by season she has
recorded the miracles she found there, miracles that epitomize the truth that
we are all part of nature; that because of our primeval background we hunger
for simplicities of the past, the beauty of flowers, trees, and animals. Her
essays build awareness and open the eyes of children to a world of wonder and
delight they may not have known before.”
While I never had the privilege to go on a walk with
Lois, her words transport me into a forest that feels absolutely timeless. “It
was a perfect day to walk in the woods,” she began, and I’m sure you can
imagine it with her. “The first snow had been followed by a warm, sunny day so
that the packy snow went “squdge, sqwudge” under foot. Though well-grown and
diversified, this forest still bore the scars of long-ago logging. Skid roads,
now barely discernible, meandered down wooded slopes toward bogs and ponds.
They were primarily game trails now, and little more than occasional cuts and fills
were left as reminders of man’s intrusions.”
“The light covering of snow was pierced by winter ferns,
ground pine, and club mosses that were unbelievably green by contrast, and
where the evergreens were thick the duff was richly brown.
Except for the distant chattering of a couple of
squirrels the woods were silent, but the soft snow carried telltale marks that
indicated an abundance of unseen life. Where birch trees had fallen and the
wood long since crumbled away, the durable bark remained in long crumpled tubes
and in and out of these ran the twin dimpled marks of weasels, these often
overlaid upon the dainty tracks of mice and voles.”
“A hollow log had housed a porcupine, his droppings and a
quill or two inside and outside; where his shuffling feet had pressed the damp
snow down, the dye from decaying leaves had turned it yellow-brown. Squirrels
had hopscotched from tree to tree and the shards of thousands of hemlock cones
were evidence of how busy they and the birds had been.”
“As the trail dipped toward the bog it was crisscrossed
by rabbit tracks. Here too, silent as a shadow, a raven, gliding into a pine
top, vanished as if it had never been. The tracks of a coyote followed the
trail for a while before veering off in the midst of a thick growth of young
balsams. Just brushing against these balsams in passing left a scent on
clothing that lasted for hours.”
“Woodland ponds were covered with skim ice, but the
rivulets draining them still ran free, and along them were myriad small tracks
too blurred in the wet snow to be identified. Like unpatterned cross stitching,
binding the landscape together, were the tracks of deer of various sizes and
even in this shallow snow the toe drags were often apparent.”
“These were some of the things I saw, but how much did I
miss? How many unseen eyes watched me? There is never time to peer into every
hold, under every flap of bark, behind every stump and tree. The only tangible
reminder I brought back was a handful of tamarack twigs with their dainty
cones, but long after these are gone the pictures in my mind will live.”
How lucky we are that Lois wrote down these accounts of
her wayside wanderings, so that the timeless images can live in our minds, too.
Lois accomplished many great things over the years, but perhaps one of the most
valuable is her ability to bring us into the woods with her. May the peace of
her forest walk stay with you throughout your day.
Special Note: Emily’s book, Natural Connections:
Exploring Northwoods Nature through Science and Your Senses is here! Order your
copy at http://cablemuseum.org/natural-connections-book/.
For 50 years, the Cable Natural History Museum has served
to connect you to the Northwoods. Come visit us in Cable, WI! Our new phenology
exhibit: “Nature’s Calendar: Signs of the Seasons” is open through March 11.
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