


The Ghosts of October
By the end of October in these parts, the long decline toward winter has
ceased being an autumn flourish and started to look inevitable. The world is
literally dying.
The fields that turned from May-green to midsummer rust and then to hay
are now expanses of stiff, dead grass and gray goldenrod. Milkweed pods
have cracked and sent off wispy seed wraiths and are shriveling on the stalks.
The trees look like gray skeletons. Bony limbs and bare trunks stretching up
hillsides and into untold miles of woods - you can't quite believe winter could
undo so many so completely. But there they are by the thousands, sapless and
naked, empty and deep at the same time, as if keeping something back. The
firs and spruces seem clothed for the coming cold, but the maple, birch and
ironwood leaves are strewn on the ground ready to return to dirt.
The leaves die by a process called senescence - which means growing old -
brought on by declines in daylight and warmth. With less light, the tree
manufactures less chlorophyll, which in summer makes the leaves green.
Other chemicals also slow production, and cells between the base of the leaf
and twig start to die. The dead cells thicken until they're brittle, and the leaf
breaks off. A large maple tree can lose a quarter million leaves. When they're
gone just the skeleton of limbs and branches remains, except for some whose
marcesent leaves, like on oaks and beeches, cling to the twigs well into
winter. No less lifeless, though.
The effect of this on your eye is a premonition of winter that turns into a
chill in your spine. Winter bears an uncanny resemblance to death, or an idea
we have of death, none of us having experienced it yet. Right at the end of
October, when the woods and fields look this bare and lifeless, the ancient
Celts saw the end of the year. The next day began their new year and in
Christianity became All Saints Day. And that night before became "All
hallow eve," which we've shortened to Halloween.
The Celts called it Samhain, and held a festival of the dead. It was thought
that in the transition from the death of the old year to the birth of the new,
the boundary between the otherworld, where the departed spirits dwell, and
the natural world, where we live, thinned and broke down. The spirits of the
dead could cross over to the world of the living, and vice versa, in that weird
moment. To stave off whisperings that could harrow up your soul or freeze
young blood, people in places like Scotland and Ireland impersonated the
departed with masks and odd clothing. Large turnips were carved with faces
as sentinels to scare off spirits. Later in North America, pumpkins worked
even better.
By this time in the world of commerce and relaxed religion, All-hallow eve
has shriveled into a lark for children. But still, the natural ghosts of goldenrod
and naked maples surround us like departed spirits, and there are times when
you could almost think that just unseen in the woods there toward the
cemetry, or trapped in the attic making faint rustling sounds, an apparition in
the shape of a skeleton like a pile of dishes or a chandelier, with tongues of
fire licking along its upper teeth and smoke rolling in its eye sockets, had
crossed into where it shouldn't be.
Or shouldn't it? Can't we know what the dead are keeping back? It happens
every year, it's inevitable and all around us. You can see it there in the
woods, that apparently go on forever.
Amateur Naturalist
All text in these pages Copyright 2008-11 Dana
Wilde. Photos of Earth objects Copyright Dana
Wilde and Bonnie Woellner unless otherwise
attributed.
Photos and graphics of outer space objects courtesy
of NASA unless otherwise attributed.
Contact: naturalist@dwildepress.net
October ghosts.
By Dana Wilde
This essay and others like it
are available in paperback
and for instant electronic
download from
Booklocker.com.