An Obsessive Sense of Place
Lattices of salmon ribs litter the banks of a stream. On cold autumn nights, frost flowers bloom
reflecting star light. The stream
babbles and unintelligible song as it rushes westward. It is the salmons’ place to be born, tow
spawn; it is their place to disintegrate and die. Salmon are anadromous fish, fish evolved to
follow an elegant rhythm of always returning to their birth stream to spawn
after maturing in a saltwater or sweetwater se.
For male
and female salmon alike, the imprint of place is their obsession. As smolts they burst from their transparent
eggs still wearing a yolk sac on their bulging bellies. Like their ancient ancestors who breathed
glacial meltwater through their gills, the newborns streak down stream to the
freedom of the great inland sweetwater seas known as the Great Lakes. In jade green waters they feed their
voracious dream until their bodies grow heavy with it—until they resemble
silver purses stuffed with treasure: slick coral beads and pearly white milt.
Summer sun dazzles
down through the thermoclines—the layers of warm, cool, cold water—where
it enters through the fishes’ pineal eyes—triangles on top of their
heads—giving them sure knowledge of their place in the larger scheme of
things. They bide their time drifting in
schools, fanning their tails in repose, gorging on small fish. They dream of their place where clear water
chortles over quartz and granite under shifting shadows of white pine and tamarack. It is their place and as their urgent need to
return gather force under a moon that grows heavy on the horizon, a moon the
color of salmon eggs, a moon that must change to bone white, the salmon mill
about in the harbor.
The fishes’ bellies grow heavy as the harvest moon. The dream becomes reality as celestial cues,
the sun, the moon, the stars enter each cellule and each dancing atom of their
bodies. Then they begin. The fish return to their stream and nothing
will stop them: they ignore hunger, snares, treble hooks. On their silvery sides their lateral lines
carry everything they need to know; their maps and compasses imbedded in the
circuitry of their bodies…the hereditary wisdom of their species carried in a
network of circuits from pineal to tail.
It is a sure knowledge of the west Michigan
river system linked to the Great Lakes .
--Barbara Spring