Our hearts are strangely quieted. Calmed. At peace as we watch the West Indian Manatees move through the virgin waters of Blue Spring. We are standing on holy ground.
So gracefully does the Manatee approach the spring head, the deep vertical cave through the limestone that gently empties165 million gallons of water per day into the St. Johns River from the aquifer below, enough for every resident of greater Orlando to drink 50 gallons of water a day. The Manatee knows nothing of Orlando. Nothing of Epcot or Disney World. Nothing of vacations, technology, or malls, or the Holy Land amusement park. She lives where she is . . . in this undisturbed place where she spends her winters to survive the cold by the warm water of Blue Spring.Her movements are effortless . . . fluid and gentle, like the water around her. Her huge flat tail, like a leaf wafting in a soft breeze, moves her through the aqua blue waters of the pool. Slowly, very slowly, she inches toward the edge of the black oblong opening in the water, the deep black hole in the Earth. Her tail stops moving. She stops. She stays very still. She lowers her head, alike the Virgin Mary pondering the mystery of the Incarnation, as if to bow down to the source of her life.
Blue Spring is its own kind of Temple. A sacred place of the deepest silence where only those natural to this habitat belong. Today I was there, and the beauty of it deepened the sense of wonder of flesh and blood and water and algae and sabal palms and a natural quiet. My head bows, mellowed and calmed, joining the Manatee, bowing over the place deep below the surface from which the pure water flows.

Yes, wonderful to find such calm and peace in the living of these big mammals, just being.
LikeLike
Carolyn, as you know, the manatee’s closest relative is the elephant. Wonderful creatures.
LikeLike
Achingly beautiful.
LikeLike
Thank you, Barbara.
LikeLike