A Creek

A Creek


The ground is saturated. Rain water trickles through the soil and into drainage ditches that divide the meadow. Yesterday I spotted a young boy squatting down beside one of those ditches. His bike laid carelessly on its side, as if he couldn’t wait to plunge into the water, to see what he might find there.

I remembered the park a street behind us when I was this boy’s age. There was a creek that wound around the park, and the playground smelled of fresh mud. I imagine the creek flooded in the spring of the year. But I wouldn’t have noticed that at the time.

All I knew then was the smell of the run in the dank days of spring, standing on the bank, immersed as this boy was immersed, catching crawdads or, later, bottling creek water to look at under my microscope. Every day had the same catch in its breath as these days do.

One thought on “A Creek

  1. There is a bridge in our woods that seems to be made out of recycled materials, and it must include a canvas-like material. This bridge has a distinctive smell–especially when wet–just like the canvas tents we used as kids to sleep out in our backyard. I've always heard that smells can trigger memories, and everytime I cross that bridge, I seem to go back in time. As you note, the smell of fresh mud or a flooded creek can do that, too…

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