(For David McCloskey)
Tahlequah is daughter of Princess Angeline
brother of Moby, sister to Kiki, mother
to Notch. Her second offspring was not
born but born still and still un-named &
un-numbered. For five days Tahlequah
.
pushed her still-born calf around the
Salish Sea, perhaps a hope that she’d
not be a parent to bury a child, perhaps
a grief vigil, the un-named/un-numbered
calf riding dead on her rostrum five days.
.
Tahlequah, Cherokee for “plains” or a kind
of red rice, or “just two” or “two is enough.”
Or a ferry terminal on Vashon. Five days
says the witness from the whale museum
sitting shiva and watching her “deep breaths.”
.
She carried the dead calf 20 miles one day
in her teeth from time to time through the
full Ripe Thimbleberry Moon, through stage
one grief, denial. “We are going to be here
as long as necessary for her.” Here
.
is what your ferry-line idling of your
giant truck brings, 108.7 degree low
temperatures in Quriyat, Oman, eleven
fires in the Arctic Circle, momma whales
pushing around their still-born calves five days.
.
But you stayed cool in your air-conditioned
life, you had bigger fish to fry than whales
who have no lobby, you idled that engine
until the last glacier died, the last salmon
leapt & last forest burned.
.
These are the stories the children of our
children will tell if there are storytellers
in their time. How we slept at the switch
ignored the clear signs of doom, how we
were scholars of war & good tweeters
.
had nice dinner photographs & saved ourselves
from Muslims & immigrants & every vague
threat the cruel majority could conjure
while the world burned & one whale mom
did all our crying for us.
.
Paul E Nelson
9:24am – 7.28.2018
“We are going to be here as long as necessary for her.” –Quote from Taylor Shedd, Program Coordinator for Soundwatch in the Seattle Times, July 27, 2018.
Etymology of Tahlequah.
Quiriyat in Oman breaks world low temperature record.
Arctic Circle burns as record heat broils Europe.
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Editor’s note:
An orca whale known to researchers as J35 or Tahlequah–that is a member of the critically endangered Southern Resident pod found in the Salish Sea–gave birth to a calf on July 24th, but it only lived for half an hour. The female then proceeded to push the dead calf for days, accompanied in grief by other orcas in the clan. National Geographic reported in 2016 on the phenomenon of grieving among orcas, who build lifelong bonds in a tight-knit community.
Many of the young orcas in this pod are severely malnourished, reports Lynda V. Mapes in a recent article in the Seattle Times. Taylor Shedd, a researcher with Soundwatch, notes the critical threats to these highly intelligent and social animals: “The whales are suffering from at least three challenges: vessel noise, which interrupts their foraging; toxins, which are released into their bloodstream and calves’ milk especially when the whales are hungry, and lack of food, especially chinook salmon.”
Photo credit: Taylor Shedd, Soundwatch. NMFS Permit # 21114.
Father/poet/teacher Paul E. Nelson is a Chicago native, founder of SPLAB (Seattle Poetics Lab), founding director of the Cascadia Poetry Festival, and author of a book of essays on poetics, Organic Poetry (2008) and a serial poem re-enacting the history of Auburn, Washington, A Time Before Slaughter (2009, Apprentice House). His most recent collection is Pig War (2015, SPLAB).
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