Archive for Neighborhood

#97 Street Work: What Lies Beneath

August 7, 2008

 
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This show originally aired in August 7, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net
Replacing aging infrastructure is costly and disruptive to utility services, but watching the water lines being upgraded and replaced on my street helps me understand just why the price tag is so high.

There are markings on the pavement in front of my house on Oxford Road. Day glow green circles, yellow dots and dashes like a Morse-code message from the underground. Red and green marks, too. Up the dense periwinkle that hugs the slope between the curb and our lawn are bright blue lines sprayed 2 inches wide ending at the round cast iron water-meter. If I didn’t know better, I’d think it was some new kids’ game made permanent with the upgrade from chalk to spray paint.

But I do know better, because for last couple of months the street in front of my house has been busy

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#95 Deer Sightings in the City

July 17, 2008

 
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This show originally aired in July 17, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net

As I sat at our kitchen table yesterday evening, casually peering into the loose thicket of privet that divides our lot from our neighbors, I was startled to see the tawny brown of what could only be a deer moving slowly across the lawn towards his house.

Head down, browsing on the choice green grass, the deer was unconcerned, casually munching as if it had been there before. Now, for many in our watershed, this would not be an unusual sight, but not only do we live in the city, we live uphill, across the street, and several houses away from the green corridor that flanks the unnamed stream that flows downhill from the ridge of Rugby Road.

So why did the deer choose to cross the road, after all?

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#82 Building Outdoor Memories

Environmental educators are pushing legislation called “No Child Left Inisde” to promote outdoor, experiential time in nature to help combat what is now being called “Nature Deficit Disorder.” But it does not take just special programs in school to help get kids outside and enjoying the wonders of nature: simply inviting a young friend to the woods or the stream will yield great rewards for both of you.

 
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This show originally aired on April 3, 2008 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net.

I have promised my six-year old friend that our time together this afternoon will involve “water,” so Aibek arrives at my house with boots that reach almost to his knees, a change of clothes, drinking water, and a snack. We are ready!

We walk through the neighborhood, where many of the backyards lean down towards small creeks that are headed, like us, towards Greenleaf Park.

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#70 Look for the Thousands of Birds

This show originally aired on December 27, 2007 on “The Rivanna Rambler,” a weekly public affairs show airing every Thursday at 11:55 a.m. on WTJU 91.1 FM or wtju.net.

The Greenleaf-Rugby Neighborhood in Charlottesville is alive with flocking robins who are making the urban forest cover their winter evening home.

It is that still time of the human winter: the lull between Christmas and New Years. In the early morning, I walk the hills of my neighborhood before the sun has fully risen past houses that are still buttoned up at 7 am. Behind closed doors, I imagine parents sleeping in, pancake breakfasts leisurely consumed in pajamas, kids getting to know their Christmas gifts. Housecats are perched at windows awaiting the return of their owners from holiday trips.

I live in Rugby Hills on the side that slopes down towards the 250 By-pass through the Greenleaf neighborhood. The high point is the ridge that Rugby Road traverses. The water from our hilly yards and streets gathers into backyard creeks that collect into a tributary that flows through a culvert under the Bypass towards Charlottesville High and McIntire Park and then into Meadow Creek. Walking the neighborhood at this time of year, I can easily scan through the bare trees across the small valleys between the streets that mark the original creases in the land.

At this hour, the streets are empty, but it is anything but quiet. From the first startled flutter of wings from the privet alongside our house as I open my front door, to the enveloping hue and cry coming from the hundreds of birds in the tall tuliptrees in our backyard, I am in the midst of a winter flock of American robins awakening from their scattered roosts in our neighborhood. They arrived, suddenly it seemed, a few weeks ago and now are part of our urban landscape, departing each morning for unkown foraging fields, in the rushing of wings that sounds like the air itself is breathing. At dusk, they return in waves for a half hour air show as they turn by the hundreds in an ever-changing Mobious strip flexing across the sky, contained and transformed by invisible elastic forces of instinct and safety in numbers.

As I walk down Cambridge Circle, the sun is rising over the Southwest Mountains and lighting the seedpods of the high branches of the tulip trees, salmon and pink like a muted outdoor Christmas display. I hear the kewing cry of our neighborhood sharp shinned hawk from its perch uphill and then, as bands of departing robins fly east towards open fields and pastures, the hawk crosses the street directly in front of me in a low swooping arc that rises towards its moving target. If there is an intersection of flight paths, I am not able to see it through the branches that layer in dense patterns against the warming sky.

I stand in the middle of the quiet street, watching the movement of life in unceasing waves of birds. Though this is my neighborhood, I am reminded of how little I really see until I stop like this – and also , with my neck tilted back for what seems like minutes of observation, how little I really know. Perhaps the resulting dizziness is an appropriate response to seeing birds numbering in the thousands headed out on a winter morning.

There is something just right about looking up at this time of the year – whether during the decent of darkness at dusk, or in the morning, like this, as the light silhouettes the shapes of the trees and houses before daylight colors them in. Looking towards the heavens, I have seen thousands of flocking birds, a vastness even by today’s standards – and one which helps remind me of my place in the neighborhood that I share with all kinds of neighborhoods. I think that this is, perhaps, a very good way to enter the New Year.

2007 Copyright by Leslie B. Middleton

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