judifilksign (
judifilksign) wrote2008-03-19 03:07 pm
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River is Rising More
The water at 3 P.M. is about a person length (height, too) from my back fence. The speed of how fast the water was advancing has slowed considerably. My husband says there are areas in the park where it can spread out a little before it rises again. I'm still checking every 15-20 minutes.
As I stood at this boundary between me and the park, with the river bubbling just beyond, I saw a bunny rabbit lop-pity lop-pity loping amidst the puddles, passing me. Next came a round, wet raccoon, waddling, waddling steadily past me. Next came a dun colored coyote padding past, tongue lolling.
All were within but a few feet of one another, but they paid no attention to either me, or one another as they steadily traveled downstream, with little space between the fence and the muddy rising water. The coyote actually passed close by the bunny rabbit without breaking stride, and the bunny didn't try to bolt.
Amazing.
As I stood at this boundary between me and the park, with the river bubbling just beyond, I saw a bunny rabbit lop-pity lop-pity loping amidst the puddles, passing me. Next came a round, wet raccoon, waddling, waddling steadily past me. Next came a dun colored coyote padding past, tongue lolling.
All were within but a few feet of one another, but they paid no attention to either me, or one another as they steadily traveled downstream, with little space between the fence and the muddy rising water. The coyote actually passed close by the bunny rabbit without breaking stride, and the bunny didn't try to bolt.
Amazing.