How Thick is the Green

Alison Cupp Relyea
2 min readOct 15, 2023

(A tribute to Edith G. Read Wildlife Sanctuary, Written on Indigenous People’s Day)

By Alison Cupp Relyea

Edith Read Wildlife Sanctuary

How thick is the green on either side

Of the path of pebbles and dirt

For humans to walk, passing safely

The deer leaping over the tangle

The rabbits scurrying under

We walk alongside

And marvel at the twists and the turns

Of branches and leaves and vines

Flecks of yellow and white

Wildflowers, petals, nearly lost

In a green so thick

I can almost hear it breathing

How rhythmic is the water

Lapping the sandy shore

Coming forth and receding

The pendulum of nature

Our earliest lessons in science

We learned the structure of water

Two hydrogen, one oxygen

But knowing the pieces

Doesn’t mean we can build it

To replace what’s already lost

The rhythm of water so soothing

Its easy to forget what we’ve done

How cool is the breeze

Moving across the water’s surface

Shivering the green leaves

A gentle sweep through stray hair

A caress like a hand stroking my cheek

A reminder of the air we breathe

Oxygen, carbon dioxide, dust

Invisible, life-sustaining compounds

So taken for granted, this air

The exchange between plants and animals

Carried off by the cool, cool breeze

An overlooked miracle of biology

How sturdy is the wood

Planks form boardwalks through the thick green

Carrying us over the wetlands

So the water and roots can do their thing

And we can do ours

With sneakers still mostly dry

The wood cut from trees

Shipped from somewhere, not these trees

Sanded and measured, cut into 2 by 4s

Rings and knots still visible

These sturdy wood planks under our feet

Were once part of their own green

How flawed are the humans

Who look at all this with fear and frustration

The bamboo, the wineberries, we call them invasive

But who brought them here?

I pluck the slightly sticky ripened wineberries

Wondering if they know they are unwanted

The deer and the ticks, mosquitos and black flies

Never asked us to encroach on their space

Even the lantern fly, its signature red speckled wings

Smashed dead on the wood path

It’s the flawed humans, traveling the world

Carrying creatures away that never asked to leave

How brilliant is the imagination

In a space of green, water, breezes, and wood

With creatures and plants, indigenous and invasive

I sense what life was like before

On a drive many years ago

With a toddler sleeping in a carseat

Passing the Shinnecock Nation on Montauk Highway

I asked my husband if he ever dreamed of life long ago

He answered with a list of all that was missing

Antibiotics, cars, planes, phones

Yet using my imagination in these brilliant woods

I wonder if maybe, just maybe, they had everything

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Alison Cupp Relyea

Full-time human, part-time writer, trying to do my part to make sense of this crazy world. Writer of everyday life, history and politics with threads of humor.