Algonquin fills me with desire. The desire to play amongst Algonquin
forests, to paddle its sweet, sweet lake waters and swim from its Islands. Not
a day passes where my mind doesn’t travel down Highway 60, past the gates that
mark the entrance to heaven on earth and into a place of profound comfort. A
place where the world simply feels right. A place where the stars align to
guide weary travellers.
A
dark, star filled sky is how I describe Algonquin to those never welcomed to
its bosom. A black canvas on which constellations dance to the haunting,
romantic wail of the master of the northern waters. The vocal blessings of the
loon accompanied by the chorus of the forest, the aria of the wilderness. This
beautiful song that is the spirited call of the Loon echoes the call of my soul
to the heart of the universe. A beckoning for understanding and forgiveness of
self.
I
vividly recall the first loon I heard in Algonquin. I remember how dark and
still and silent the night was, a storm approaching, the forest ill at ease.
The scent of imminent rains carried on the winds of warning. Algonquin is no
stranger to violently destructive windstorms and can sense the approach of this
acquaintance as much as you or I would a stranger at our door. All things wild
brace themselves and scurry into their shelters for protection. The loon
however, sailed across the blackened sky, singing. The flight of a loon is
decidedly distinctive, strong, direct and rapid.
It’s
song even more so.
The scream of the
loon, uttered at evening, or on the approach of a storm, has to my ear, an
unearthly and mournful tone resembling somewhat the distant howl of a wolf. It
is a penetrating note, loud and weird, delivered with a prolonged rising
inflection, dropping at the end.
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