The forest is quiet – the floor is littered with last season’s fallen leaves.
You can barely hear the ripple of the creek where the clean, clear water flows across the rocks.
Shhh, listen. Can you hear it?
Whip-poor-will, Whip-poor-will, Whip-poor-will.
The call of the Whip-poor-will.
Look. Over there on the side of road the bulldozers quietly, patiently, sit in wait.
Thump, thump. There’s a knock on the farm house door. Vicky isn’t expecting anyone. She wipes her hands and pulls the curtain back. Vicky doesn’t recognize the man in the suit with the clipboard of papers under his arm.
She opens the door. “Can I help you?”
“Good afternoon.” John explains that he is from Hi Crush, the sand mining company. “Your farm has the prime sand we are looking for and we’re willing to pay you handsomely for it. The papers are all ready, just sign here.”
Vicky’s face becomes ashen. “This farm has been in my family for well over 30 years. My son has spent years restoring that prairie you call a sand mine.”
“This farm is not for sale!” Vicky closes the door.
Vicky spends the evening worrying about the future of her family farm. Tossing and turning, she barely sleeps that night. While she lays awake she can hear it.
Whip-poor-will, Whip-poor-will, Whip-poor-will.
When she wakes up in the morning Vicky remembers an article she read in her local paper about protecting land. She digs through the papers on her desk until she finds the one she is looking for. Vicky re-reads the article.
Then she picks up her phone and calls Mississippi Valley Conservancy!
Vicky talks about her farm with Abbie. She talks about the years her kids spent growing up on it. She remembers how they loved to go down to the creek with their city cousins and splash in the water. She remembers how they would come back to the house muddy and exhausted, but with grins from ear to ear.
And Vicky talks about the wildlife and plants that still call her farm home.
Over the next few months, Vicky works with the team at Mississippi Valley Conservancy. She tells us how important protecting her farm forever is to her, her kids, and her grandkids. She talks about the clean, clear water that runs through the creek below. And she talks about the Whip-poor-will, and the other animals that live on her farm.
Today, Vicky is at peace knowing her family farm is protected from development forever through a conservation agreement with Mississippi Valley Conservancy.
Because of this agreement, Vicky’s grandkids and great grandkids will splash through the stream and come back to the house wet, muddy and happily, exhausted.
Because of this agreement, Vicky and her family will continue to hear the call of the Whip-poor-will as it drifts through the valleys and across the forest floor – for generations to come.
Whip-poor-will, Whip-poor-will, Whip-poor-will.
Story by: Carol Abrahamzon, Executive Director, Mississippi Valley Conservancy