About three times a day, the dogs go bonkers and, as soon as they are let outside, they rush down to the creek. Sometimes they go charging down into it and come back wet and muddy. Sometimes they run up the side of it into the field. Sometimes they bark, sometimes they just race. Usually it’s because of a squirrel. But occasionally, it’s one of these guys. I’ve busted coyotes out in our yard several times. I yell at them to go away, and if the chickens are out, they just barely comply. I love them anyway.

The bobcat we don’t see so much. A neighbor says the bobcat had kits last summer for sure. So maybe we have more than one in the area. Again, I love them, even if they, too, take a chicken now and then.

Coyotes and Bobcat

I use the phrase “The veil is thin,” on my social media. It’s a common enough phrase. But it sums up how I feel about the world around me. I feel that there is always something beyond what we see, that we sometimes perceive—maybe quietly, maybe with a sudden rush, breathtaking awe. For me, that happens often in nature. Not exclusively. But often.

Coyote Creek borders our home on the west and south, with a section of the Shawnee National Forest across the road to the north, and a dense patch of woods to the east. (Coyote Creek may have another, more official name, but that’s what I call it when it is so near Underhill.)

The creek runs fully only after a good rain. Most of the time, most of it is dry. The creek bed is a highway for wildlife. When I step down into the creek bed and walk along, the outside world is hushed. I hear the thud of a black walnut hitting the ground as a squirrel scampers above in the branches, chucking at me for trespassing. Insects buzz, and frogs plop-jump into the still pools that are watering hole and community center for the birds, raccoons, deer, possums, and other animals. Everything else holds its breath.

My husband, singer-songwriter Tim Crosby, gifted me a couple trail cameras for my birthday. From the footage I check every day or so, I can see how many animals come and go in the creek bed, how much wildlife goes about daily life just a few feet away from the house, and we only see them when they come out of the creek. It’s humbling.

And even though this it’s all part of the physical world, it’s another reminder: the veil is thin.

Enjoy the doe and fawn here. I’ve got lots more deer, but also some exciting coyote and bobcat footage to share soon. This is from two days of video in late May.