{"title":"在路的尽头","authors":"D. J. Robertson","doi":"10.3375/0885-8608-42.4.332","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Imagine that you are standing on a coastal lowland, but set back from the shoreline so that your view encompasses the meadows, salt marshes, reed beds, and mudflats between you and the open ocean. It is a misty morning; the light is low and diffuse, as if you are viewing the scene through diaphanous curtains. As you gaze toward the sea, the dense, swirling fog parts momentarily affording—just for a few seconds—a crystal clear vision of some object in the landscape: a wind-blasted tree, a cow grazing, a sandpiper probing for worms at the wrack line. Your mind registers the image in exquisite detail, and then the fog closes in and the object disappears from sight again, leaving only a mental image that gradually fades as another object emerges from the shifting clouds to grab your attention. Such is the experience, both literally and figuratively, of reading Phillip Edwards’s At the Very End of the Road, a book that is at once masterful and maddening. The observations recounted here occur on a foggy British seacoast with flashes of brilliant wildlife sightings, but the sightings are presented in such an endless flurry they befog the reader’s consciousness. Frustrated by the depauperate natural landscape near densely populated Cambridge, Edwards sought and found a new home at the very end of a paved road on England’s western coast. For 19 years, Edwards wandered the fields, hedgerows, salt marshes, and strands surrounding his new place, documenting his sightings in extraordinary detail. In his book, he presents observations characteristic of each month to immerse his readers in the nature of the place over the course of a year. Edwards provides few explicit details about the location of his home, mostly to prevent casual visitors from overwhelming the area. His observations take place on a spit of land bordered on one side by the mouth of a river, and on the other side by the open ocean. Off the tip of the peninsula lies an island. However, Edwards’s description of the location is so spare that his references to low hills and moors visible on the far horizon at odd compass coordinates were difficult to reconcile with the vague image of the spit I had envisioned from his introduction. In an attempt to resolve these seeming inconsistencies and form a firmer mental orientation to the locale, I consulted a British road atlas and identified the likely spit and associated island. A further bit of internet sleuthing confirmed that the marshes and mudflats surrounding the estuary are important shorebird habitat protected in a National Nature Reserve. In fact, in his epilogue, Edwards concedes, ‘‘Some of [my readers] may come to see this place; it will not be hard to identify, and confirmation will be easy.’’ The physiography of the spit is low and flat, and the region is generally well-watered. As a result, the productive land has been divided into 12 agricultural fields that are grazed by cattle or sheep, or are mowed for hay. Seawalls in various states of repair line the river and ocean edges and protect the land from all but the worst storms. The fields are crisscrossed by drainage ditches. The sea defenses, ditches and ponds, and hedgerows produce some topographic diversity that provides habitat for birds and a few other animals in a largely featureless terrestrial landscape. However, most of Edwards’s attention is focused on the mudflats, salt marshes, and shingle beaches at the waters’ edges—and the vast majority of the observations involve birds. He mentions some mammals: foxes, rabbits, hares, sheep, cattle, and occasional badgers, rodents, roe deer, weasels, and a bat. He","PeriodicalId":49780,"journal":{"name":"Natural Areas Journal","volume":"42 1","pages":"332 - 333"},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"At the Very End of the Road\",\"authors\":\"D. J. Robertson\",\"doi\":\"10.3375/0885-8608-42.4.332\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Imagine that you are standing on a coastal lowland, but set back from the shoreline so that your view encompasses the meadows, salt marshes, reed beds, and mudflats between you and the open ocean. It is a misty morning; the light is low and diffuse, as if you are viewing the scene through diaphanous curtains. As you gaze toward the sea, the dense, swirling fog parts momentarily affording—just for a few seconds—a crystal clear vision of some object in the landscape: a wind-blasted tree, a cow grazing, a sandpiper probing for worms at the wrack line. Your mind registers the image in exquisite detail, and then the fog closes in and the object disappears from sight again, leaving only a mental image that gradually fades as another object emerges from the shifting clouds to grab your attention. Such is the experience, both literally and figuratively, of reading Phillip Edwards’s At the Very End of the Road, a book that is at once masterful and maddening. The observations recounted here occur on a foggy British seacoast with flashes of brilliant wildlife sightings, but the sightings are presented in such an endless flurry they befog the reader’s consciousness. Frustrated by the depauperate natural landscape near densely populated Cambridge, Edwards sought and found a new home at the very end of a paved road on England’s western coast. For 19 years, Edwards wandered the fields, hedgerows, salt marshes, and strands surrounding his new place, documenting his sightings in extraordinary detail. In his book, he presents observations characteristic of each month to immerse his readers in the nature of the place over the course of a year. Edwards provides few explicit details about the location of his home, mostly to prevent casual visitors from overwhelming the area. His observations take place on a spit of land bordered on one side by the mouth of a river, and on the other side by the open ocean. Off the tip of the peninsula lies an island. However, Edwards’s description of the location is so spare that his references to low hills and moors visible on the far horizon at odd compass coordinates were difficult to reconcile with the vague image of the spit I had envisioned from his introduction. In an attempt to resolve these seeming inconsistencies and form a firmer mental orientation to the locale, I consulted a British road atlas and identified the likely spit and associated island. A further bit of internet sleuthing confirmed that the marshes and mudflats surrounding the estuary are important shorebird habitat protected in a National Nature Reserve. In fact, in his epilogue, Edwards concedes, ‘‘Some of [my readers] may come to see this place; it will not be hard to identify, and confirmation will be easy.’’ The physiography of the spit is low and flat, and the region is generally well-watered. As a result, the productive land has been divided into 12 agricultural fields that are grazed by cattle or sheep, or are mowed for hay. Seawalls in various states of repair line the river and ocean edges and protect the land from all but the worst storms. The fields are crisscrossed by drainage ditches. The sea defenses, ditches and ponds, and hedgerows produce some topographic diversity that provides habitat for birds and a few other animals in a largely featureless terrestrial landscape. However, most of Edwards’s attention is focused on the mudflats, salt marshes, and shingle beaches at the waters’ edges—and the vast majority of the observations involve birds. He mentions some mammals: foxes, rabbits, hares, sheep, cattle, and occasional badgers, rodents, roe deer, weasels, and a bat. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
想象一下,你站在一个沿海低地上,但远离海岸线,这样你的视野就涵盖了你和公海之间的草地、盐沼、芦苇床和泥滩。这是一个雾蒙蒙的早晨;光线昏暗且漫射,就好像你在透过透明的窗帘观看场景一样。当你凝视大海时,浓密的漩涡雾瞬间消散,只需几秒钟,就能清晰地看到风景中的某个物体:一棵被风吹倒的树,一头牛在吃草,一只鹬在濑鱼线上寻找蠕虫。你的大脑以细腻的细节记录了图像,然后雾消失了,物体再次从视线中消失,只留下一个心理图像,随着另一个物体从不断变化的云层中出现来吸引你的注意力,这个图像逐渐消失。这就是阅读菲利普·爱德华兹(Phillip Edwards)的《在路的尽头》(At the Very End of the Road)的经历,无论是从字面上还是形象上,这本书既有大师风范,又令人抓狂。这里讲述的观察发生在雾蒙蒙的英国海岸,有闪光的野生动物目击事件,但这些目击事件是在无休止的混乱中呈现的,它们模糊了读者的意识。爱德华对人口稠密的剑桥附近的自然景观感到沮丧,他在英格兰西海岸一条铺好的路的尽头寻找并找到了一个新家。19年来,爱德华兹在他的新住处周围的田野、树篱、盐沼和溪流中漫步,以非凡的细节记录了他的目击事件。在他的书中,他介绍了每个月的观察结果,让读者在一年的时间里沉浸在这个地方的本质中。Edwards几乎没有提供关于他家所在位置的明确细节,主要是为了防止随意的游客涌入该地区。他的观察发生在一片陆地上,一边是河口,另一边是公海。半岛的尽头有一座岛屿。然而,爱德华兹对这个位置的描述是如此的简洁,以至于他提到的在遥远的地平线上以奇怪的罗盘坐标可以看到的低矮的山丘和沼泽地很难与我在他的介绍中想象的唾液的模糊图像相协调。为了解决这些看似不一致的问题,并对当地形成更坚定的心理定位,我查阅了一本英国道路地图册,确定了可能的唾液和相关岛屿。进一步的网络调查证实,河口周围的沼泽和泥滩是国家自然保护区保护的重要滨鸟栖息地。事实上,Edwards在他的后记中承认,“我的一些读者可能会来看这个地方;它不会很难识别,确认也很容易吐口水的地貌是低而平坦的,该地区通常水充足。因此,生产性土地被划分为12块农田,供牛或羊放牧,或割草干草。处于各种修复状态的海堤排列在河流和海洋边缘,保护陆地免受除最严重风暴外的所有风暴的侵袭。田地里的排水沟纵横交错。海防、沟渠、池塘和树篱产生了一些地形多样性,为鸟类和其他一些动物提供了栖息地,使其在基本上没有特色的陆地景观中生存。然而,爱德华兹的大部分注意力都集中在水域边缘的泥滩、盐沼和卵石海滩上,而绝大多数观测都涉及鸟类。他提到了一些哺乳动物:狐狸、兔子、野兔、绵羊、牛,偶尔还有獾、啮齿类动物、黄鹿、黄鼠狼和蝙蝠。他
Imagine that you are standing on a coastal lowland, but set back from the shoreline so that your view encompasses the meadows, salt marshes, reed beds, and mudflats between you and the open ocean. It is a misty morning; the light is low and diffuse, as if you are viewing the scene through diaphanous curtains. As you gaze toward the sea, the dense, swirling fog parts momentarily affording—just for a few seconds—a crystal clear vision of some object in the landscape: a wind-blasted tree, a cow grazing, a sandpiper probing for worms at the wrack line. Your mind registers the image in exquisite detail, and then the fog closes in and the object disappears from sight again, leaving only a mental image that gradually fades as another object emerges from the shifting clouds to grab your attention. Such is the experience, both literally and figuratively, of reading Phillip Edwards’s At the Very End of the Road, a book that is at once masterful and maddening. The observations recounted here occur on a foggy British seacoast with flashes of brilliant wildlife sightings, but the sightings are presented in such an endless flurry they befog the reader’s consciousness. Frustrated by the depauperate natural landscape near densely populated Cambridge, Edwards sought and found a new home at the very end of a paved road on England’s western coast. For 19 years, Edwards wandered the fields, hedgerows, salt marshes, and strands surrounding his new place, documenting his sightings in extraordinary detail. In his book, he presents observations characteristic of each month to immerse his readers in the nature of the place over the course of a year. Edwards provides few explicit details about the location of his home, mostly to prevent casual visitors from overwhelming the area. His observations take place on a spit of land bordered on one side by the mouth of a river, and on the other side by the open ocean. Off the tip of the peninsula lies an island. However, Edwards’s description of the location is so spare that his references to low hills and moors visible on the far horizon at odd compass coordinates were difficult to reconcile with the vague image of the spit I had envisioned from his introduction. In an attempt to resolve these seeming inconsistencies and form a firmer mental orientation to the locale, I consulted a British road atlas and identified the likely spit and associated island. A further bit of internet sleuthing confirmed that the marshes and mudflats surrounding the estuary are important shorebird habitat protected in a National Nature Reserve. In fact, in his epilogue, Edwards concedes, ‘‘Some of [my readers] may come to see this place; it will not be hard to identify, and confirmation will be easy.’’ The physiography of the spit is low and flat, and the region is generally well-watered. As a result, the productive land has been divided into 12 agricultural fields that are grazed by cattle or sheep, or are mowed for hay. Seawalls in various states of repair line the river and ocean edges and protect the land from all but the worst storms. The fields are crisscrossed by drainage ditches. The sea defenses, ditches and ponds, and hedgerows produce some topographic diversity that provides habitat for birds and a few other animals in a largely featureless terrestrial landscape. However, most of Edwards’s attention is focused on the mudflats, salt marshes, and shingle beaches at the waters’ edges—and the vast majority of the observations involve birds. He mentions some mammals: foxes, rabbits, hares, sheep, cattle, and occasional badgers, rodents, roe deer, weasels, and a bat. He
期刊介绍:
The Natural Areas Journal is the flagship publication of the Natural Areas Association is the leading voice in natural areas management and preservation.
The Journal features peer-reviewed original research articles on topics such as:
-Applied conservation biology-
Ecological restoration-
Natural areas management-
Ecological assessment and monitoring-
Invasive and exotic species management-
Habitat protection-
Fire ecology.
It also includes writing on conservation issues, forums, topic reviews, editorials, state and federal natural area activities and book reviews. In addition, we publish special issues on various topics.