Spring unfolds each year in color, yes, but also in sound.
And, regrettably, in noise — some of it emanating from our gardens.
When Nancy Lawson, a Maryland-based naturalist and nature writer, speaks about the voices of frogs or birds, she uses the word “sound.” When she refers to humanity’s voice — the din of mowers, blowers and chain saws — she describes it as noise, specifically “anthropogenic noise.”Her definition: something that is “disrespectful of all the other sounds and runs roughshod over them,” she said, with “often unnecessary rudeness.”These days, we’re not just driving one another crazy with the racket that fills most neighborhoods.
We’re “smothering some of the opportunities for animals to communicate through their senses,” she said, “to perceive the world through their senses.”
Persons:
Nancy Lawson, ”, we’re, “
Locations:
Maryland