I am on the beach at Cape Canaveral, Florida, and I have been quietly watching a fisherman catching and processing two Florida pompano.
There followed a perfect lion kill tableau, complete with marauding hyenas and jackals, all disguised as a fisherman and a few innocent-looking Florida beach birds.
I got down on my knees and shot and shot quickly as the birds quarreled over the pompano carcasses. Macabre? Perhaps, but no more than my own species’ quick rendering of a beating heart and frantic eye into freezable filets.
First and boldest is the ruddy turnstone, here in winter plumage. I adore turnstones, smart opportunistic little brawlers that they are. They aren’t afraid to challenge a gull ten times their size if good food is at stake.
While a ring-billed gull chokes down a morsel of fish, the turnstone darts in.
A ringbill tugs at a fish’s entrails as a boat-tailed grackle sizes up its chances of joining in. The low-angle evening light lends an epic quality to the tableau, with small hillocks in the sand reading as a dunescape.
The scene constantly changes from one carcass to the other. A laughing gull strides up to scatter the turnstones and a lone sanderling. I’m intrigued by the gull’s posture; it adopts the head-tossing, hunch-backed profile of a juvenile begging from its parent. Odd—is it begging the turnstones for a chance at the pompano? Does the sight of food just set off this juvenile behavior in a mature bird?
A ring-billed gull swoops in and holds forth over a carcass.
It'll have to get what it can before the boat-tailed grackle steals it.
The ringbill manages to free some food before a herring gull and then a great black-backed gull swoop down and end its picnic.
Not many birds argue with a great black-backed gull, pirate of the sea. The herring gull manages to hold it off for awhile
until a young great-black-backed joins in.
and when they are done there are fragments, just enough for the boat-tailed grackles
little black coroners, pronouncing the pompano dead at last. Oh how I love this shot.
Used up, all the way up, by Homo sapiens, who took the lion's share,
followed by four species of gull, two shorebirds and an icterid. Eight species all feasting on a silvery lavender blue pompano rimmed in lemon yellow
who only minutes before had been swimming in light surf on a warm evening on Cape Canaveral
whose eyes looked into mine and found me unable to help
but willing to swallow hard and document its final hour.
The fisherman packed up and went home, pompano filets swinging in a grocery bag
leaving me amazed and standing on an empty beach
wondering at the circle of life and death, the beauty of fresh food from the sea, hand-caught;
the stories in every little thing that happens,
which are there to be shared by the spirit
which are there to be shared by the spirit
left open to the thrust of grace.*
I turned back to find my children still playing in the same warm surf
and walked back to join them
rinsed clean
rinsed clean
thinking about everything and nothing at all.
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