NEW LIFE

Issue 27, Spring 2025
Deer fawn playing dead
Deer fawn playing dead until its mother returns. photo by John F. Williams

NEW LIFE

Issue 27, Spring 2025

Managing Editor: Sara Noland

(Table of Contents is below this intro)

Outside my home office window, a pair of golden-crowned sparrows is plucking the new spring buds from a Japanese maple tree. We’ve had a group of five or six of these gregarious birds in our yard all winter, hunkered in the hedge along the front walk or deep in the thorny fortress of the quince bush. They seem to prefer being low to the ground, hopping around the garden to pick at dead stems, or poking around under the bird feeders where other birds have dropped seed. But now, like the bushtits and the chickadees, the goldens have left their winter flocks to form breeding pairs—and apparently to feast on spring maple buds, a behavior I’ve never seen before despite many years of spying on my feathered visitors through the window.

The theme of this issue of Salish magazine is “new life,” and it is a time for birth, growth, and flowering. It’s a time when the big, invisible cycles and webs of nature are perhaps most apparent. Last year’s blanket of fallen leaves feeds soil, roots, buds, and flowers. Plants feed insects, insects feed birds. Fallen leaves and bird bones enrich the soil.

I like to also think of spring as a time to renew my curiosity about the natural world; a time to ask new questions about old friends, like the golden-crowned sparrows in the maple tree. Do the new buds contain sugars or insects that make them a tasty treat for sparrows? Do other bird species eat tree buds? Are the buds of other plants also devoured by birds? There’s an ecological relationship I’d never thought about.

Maple buds
Bigleaf maple buds. photo by John F. Williams

And don’t even get me started about hummingbirds — my constant winter companions through wind, snow, and rain — buzzing me if I dare approach their feeder or favorite perching branch. I thought I knew them inside and out, but a couple of weeks ago I watched a female Anna’s hummer do something amazing. In mid-flight she gathered a beakful of silky seedpods from last year’s dried fireweed stalks. I planted some fireweed in the front garden a decade ago because I love its purple flowers, a marvelous nectar source for both insects and hummers. In the fall I enjoy the unique spray of feathery seedpods, which presumably help the plant spread its seeds by wind or caught in the fur of a passing mammal. The seed pods becoming nesting material for thumb-sized birds? Another springtime revelation sprouting.

Underlying each writer’s contribution is a unifying theme: connections. These aren’t just isolated glimpses of beauty but interwoven moments that sustain the larger web of life.

Please send us your thoughts. Salish Magazine will continue to evolve and improve with ideas from you. Our SUBSCRIBE page also has a form you can use to contact us.

And if you’d like to submit content to future issues or help us in some other way, the VOLUNTEER page has a form for that.

Happy Spring!

 

Issue 27: New Life: Table of Contents

 

You can subscribe using the SUBSCRIBE menu above. It’s free, and we will send you newsletters when new articles and new issues are posted online.

Images of New Life

Images of New Life

by John F. Williams
Spring 2025

New Life is prevalent in the spring, and here is a photo essay which shows some of that new life in the Salish Sea region as well as some things which lead to new life.

Springtime Bees

Springtime Bees

by Sarah Ottino
Spring 2025

The longer, warming days of spring rouse native bees from their winter slumber. Some great bee photos accompany this story of bees we see in our Salish Sea region.

Salish Sea Salamanders

Salish Sea Salamanders

by Dominick Leskiw, Julianna Hallza
Spring 2025p

Finding a long-toed salamander under a fallen log is a special experience. Hallza was conducting research exploring the impact of a restoration project on long-toed salamanders

Spring Aliens

Spring Aliens

by Thomas and Sara Noland
Spring 2025

It’s spring and botanical aliens are awakening, poking their green beaks up through mud and last year’s fallen leaves to test the spring air. Or are they skunk cabbage?

Herald of Spring

Herald of Spring

by Lucienne Miodonski
Summer 2025

Among the first avian harbingers of spring to return to their breeding grounds in the marshes, wetlands, and open fields are male red-winged blackbirds.

Artwork 27

Artwork 27

by Linda Hanlon
Spring 2025

No this alligator lizard is not in the air, and this is not on the Ventura Highway. But here are two gouache paintings which herald spring, including a budding trillium.

Poetry 27

Poetry 27

by various poets
Spring 2025

Here are poems by two poets bringing us verbal imagery of new life, and old life responding to the new. From the sea to the trees and the sidewalks, winter gives way to spring.

Salish Magazine

Publisher: John F. Williams

Managing Editor: Sara Noland

This magazine is a nonprofit project of:

SEA-Media

P.O. Box 1407 Suquamish WA 98392

www.salishmagazine.org

Copyright 2025, SEA-Media
All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution, in whole or in part. without consent of copyright owner is strictly prohibited — except for brief quotations in critical reviews and other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright laws.
SEA-Media is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation

Extra special thanks to:

Sara & Tom Noland, Grant Blackinton, Nancy Taylor, Ren Alea, Kathy Haskin, Andrea Benson, Brianna Clark, Heather Hesslink, Allison Richard, Phillip Rosaaen, Katrina Simmons, Michele LaMaistre, Adelia Ritchie, Susan Merrill, Mary Johnson, and all of the credited authors and image contributors.

Sincere thanks also to our Patreon patrons:

Amy Lawrence
Beverly Parsons
Brooke Thompson
Bruce Wade
Carolyn E Hart
Catherine Whalen
Clare
Doug
Jeffrey Duda
Jeffrey Thompson
Jennifer
John A. Wiles
Jordon Griffith
Joyce & Steve Nishimura
Judy Atkins
Karen Best
Marie Magrath
Marion Allen
Mark Hoffman
Michele LaMaistre
Patricia Thompson
Patricia Weagant
Ray, Charlotte Garrido
Robyn Jackson
Tena and Earl Doan
Terry Jackson
Wendy McClure

And sincere thanks to our all of our other donors, especially these recent ones:

Thomas Armentrout

Holly O. Austin

Elizabeth Bamber

Cary Blackburn

John Bolivar

J. Frisbee Campbell

Elaine Chuang

Kim Clarkin

Ryan Cope

Sherry & Russell Cordiner

Nancy & Dick D’Archangel

Karen deMeurisse

Lisa Eastep

Clarissa Felling

Melissa Fleming

Larry Franks

Kristin Galbreaith

Maradel Gale

Lisa Giles

Linda Golden

Shannon Goodfellow

Mary K Grannis

Albert Gunby

Sheryl Hamm

James Haney

Diane Harding

Hutch/Mary Anne Haney

Florence Hansen

Dawn Henthorn

Doug & Kris Hotchkiss

Karen Johnston

Sheila Kelley

Karin Kersteter

Anne Kundtz

Joe Lubischer

Michael Maddox

Nancy Mandell

Bobbi Marshall

Patrick Marshall

Tom Marvin

Julia Masura

Mandi May

Laura Marx

Susan McDonald

Carole Miller

Julia Miller

Katha Miller-Winder

Dianna Moore

Jon Oleyar

Mary Kay Oliveri

Tania Opland

Elisabet Orville

Ce-Ann Parker

Paul, Sharon Pegany

Nancy Petersen

Micaela Petrini

Amy Porter

Ann Randlette

William Rick

Elsie Rowe

Stephen Rubin

Deb Rudnick

April Ryan

Michelle Ryder

Leslie Schneider

Alexander Shor

Marie Sprandel

Regina Spoor

Richard Stocking

David & Kathleen Thorne

Daniel Tufford

Philene & John Vaivods

John Van Den Meerendonk

Kristina Vogt

Sara Wade

Randena Walsh

Wayde Watters

Patricia Weagant

Rick William

Don, Judy Willott

COPYRIGHT

Copyright SEA-Media
All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution, in whole or in part. without consent of copyright owner is strictly prohibited — except for brief quotations in critical reviews and other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright laws.
SEA-Media is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation

PLEASE HELP SUPPORT

SALISH MAGAZINE

DONATE

Salish Magazine contains no advertising and is free. Your donation is one big way you can help us inspire people with stories about things that they can see outdoors in our Salish Sea region.

We also don't advertise Salish Magazine, so please spread the word of this online resource to your friends and colleagues.

Thanks so much for your interest and your support.