Dawn in the Big
City; it starts with the flashing yellow light of the garbage truck
as it screeches to a halt in front of our building; Followed by the
roll of the garage door below, and the sound of garbage cans being rolled
around, lifted, dumped, and rolled back out again. Down goes the door
and off goes the truck in a roar up the street. Silence usually follows,
then slowly, the busses start to pass, about every ten minutes, straining
up the street, and the traffic of early morning commuters starts the
pulsating whoosh of traffic. An occasional click of hard shoes
on pavement, muted voices talking on cell phones, and, on Fridays, the
jangle of keys and the metallic clang of coins being emptied from parking
meters complete the sequence of the city as it starts a new day...
It is different
on Molokai...
The buzzing of
insects dies away, and the trade winds become but a barely perceptible
brush of air across your face as the dark night grows deep. Throughout
the night, all that is heard is an occasional throaty chirp chirp chirp,
in rapid succession, from a bird, or insect or other exotic creature,
I am not sure; Then silence, or sometimes the sound of something rustling
in the brush just outside the screened-in porch that is now the bedroom.
Perhaps it is Natasha,
our guard spider, doing a perimeter check...
The green-numeraled
digital alarm clock in the room is about seven or eight feet from the
bed, so with my unaided vision, is completely worthless, other than
perhaps a nightlight when stumbling around in the middle of the night.
In any case, I have no artificial clues; I only have to listen as nature
magically unfolds into a new dawn...
It starts with
the cocka-doodle-doo of the rooster, a mile or so distant. If
I were to stick my face in the clock to check the time, it would always
be right around 4:00 in the morning - the first call in the cycle of
a Molokai dawn...
For awhile, it
is just the rooster and his intermittent call, the night remains still
and dark. How the rooster knows that it is time, I do not understand...
Slowly, the air
starts to fill with one, two, three, then many bird call as the dark
sky lightens just a little, the surrounding forest silhouetted in a
silvery gray. A soft breeze picks up off the ocean, another hint of
the approaching sun, bringing with it the cool fragrance of blossoms
and sea.
As the first rays
of the rising sun break over the ocean horizon, the air is alive with
sight and sound and color and fragrance... The start of a new day on
Molokai, bright with the expectation of spring...