The
ducks’ hen-scratch tinkled into the dish as my eye just caught a wing tip swing
by in the sky. A vulture? No, whoa! My head snapped skyward; I had seen before
that wing turned down, ever so slightly, at the wrist! It was an osprey, a very
unlikely sight over our lake. He lazily circled the lake, and then dove,
half-heartedly, at a fish. He pulled up with empty talons dangling behind him,
and lighting ever so carefully in a pine he settled in for the night. He must
have been a migrant pushing south. Probably full from hunting in other lakes or
rivers, dinner seemed not to be on his mind. He was now more interested in
finding a perch for the night which would offer a vantage to spy breakfast in
the morning.
His
wing tip reminded me of another osprey wing tip I spied once descending a curvy
road to Saltville, Virginia. A narrow wrist caught my eye as the owner ascended
on the thermals over the wellfields. I was stunned to see an osprey so far from
the sea or a large lake. He seemed so out of place to me, but to him, he was
right at home. Saltville, aptly named, nestled in the ridge and valley area of
Virginia is the site of a brine spring that flows through a few ponds or as
they called, the wellfields. The wellfields are one of the few inland salt
marshes in North America. The wellfields range from very salty to barely salty
like most salt marshes. Ducks and other birds brought seeds from the seashore
in on their feathers and halophytic plants colonized this saltwater refugia.
The most gorgeous swamp mallows and deposits of reddish salt-like rock ring the
wellfields. And the snails! There are the most beautiful, stripped, large, land
snails to be found all around the water. I love the snails; they are jewels amongst the mallows.
The
salt has attracted critters from Pleistocene mega fauna to present day
critters. People, probably attracted to animals first and salt second, showed
up about 14,000 years ago. The Spanish came through the area followed later by
English colonists. The salt works provided the Confederacy with two thirds of
its salt. Salt was so important the North attacked and destroyed the salt
works.
The
salt marsh has been damaged and reduced by human exploitation of salt and
grazing, but a remnant marsh remains. If you are ever in the toe of Virginia,
do visit this extremely rare salty refugia.
Pam Croom © 2012