Catherine Sevenau

Opener of doors, teller of tales, family scribe.

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You are here: Home / THROUGH ANY GIVEN DOOR (web serial) / Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies / Post Memoir Sketches / 4.07 Final Migration

4.07 Final Migration

December 12, 2018 By Catherine Sevenau

Elizabeth Ann “Betty/Liz” (Clemens) Duchi
1939 – 2004

Liz, Aug 1998

My sister Liz knew everything about everything—and what she didn’t know—she made up. Her library was lined with books from architecture, antique lamps and art nouveau to tomes on history, the human body and Henry VIII. She also had every field-guide on flora, fauna, and all things feathered.

Liz was an avid bird-watcher and the aristocratic and ancient crane was her favorite. A “craniac,” she could tell you everything about their habits and habitats, their migration patterns, and their courting rituals. She even knew their mating calls. The birds inspired her, weaving their nests into her daily living. A life-size bronze statue stood sentry at her front door. A delicately feathered watercolor flew on her plaster walls. Cranes perched on her shelves, danced on her Japanese robe and winged across her glass lampshade.

Every fall, thousands of greater sandhills streak across the Pacific Flyway, migrating in families to feed and roost in the safety of the Central Valley wetlands near the Sacramento River. They are one of the world’s largest birds, the males standing at a stately five-feet tall with a seven-foot wingspan. They are long-legged, long-necked and bustle-bodied, sporting ash gray plumage, a black chiseled bill, sleek white cheeks, and a bald red crown. Their trumpet can be heard for miles. Between feeding and roosting, they dance this peculiar choreographed avian ballet: first one crane starts out slowly, then a second, the tempo picks up, and soon the whole flock is hopping and bowing—wing flourishing and stick tossing in wild rap-like abandon. My sister loved their elaborate floorshow, cackling her delight.

Liz and Tony, Fallbrook

In February, Liz was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. In September, she had experimental surgery at the UC Davis Cancer Clinic in Sacramento. Two weeks later, she came to stay with me. Two weeks after that, pneumonia set in and I took her back to the hospital. Three days later, she died.

Just after she took her final breath in that cool early morning, her husband Tony stepped outside to call the family. Dialing his cell phone, there was an overhead cacophony of long drawn-out bugling and clanging so loud he was unable to converse. Looking up, his irritation turned to slack-jawed wonder. A feathered cortege of two-hundred greater sandhills passed directly over his wife’s top floor hospital room in single and V-line formation—first one string, then another behind the first, then another behind them, then another, and another, necks extended, legs and tails outstretched, the slow rhythmic beating of their wings vibrating the crisp October sky, incessantly declaring GAROOO-A-A, GAROOO-A-A.

As is their nature, the whole flock trumpets most raucously when concerned or alarmed. As was her nature, Liz was probably disturbing their flight pattern on her way out. Or maybe she was joining them on their migratory trek. Or perchance, the winged ones knew she was ready and arrived to escort their friend in style—blessing my sixty-four year old sister with an exquisite tribute and a final accompaniment.

*****

Anthony Leo “Tony” Duchi, Jr.
1937 – 2009

Aug 30, 2009, North County Times:
Anthony Leo Duchi, Jr., 71, FALLBROOK – Anthony Leo Duchi, Jr., died at his home in Fallbrook on the morning of Thursday, August 20, 2009 after a long battle with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Tony was born on November 30, 1937 in an ambulance in the Callahan Tunnel in Boston, Mass. He was an entrepreneur who started and ran a number of successful businesses, including manufacturing of electronics, ham radios, defense products, and sporting goods. He was passionate about his many hobbies, which included boats and cruising, clocks, watches, antiques, cars, music, food, cooking and travel. Most important to him were his family and his many friends. He is survived by his four children and their families. He was predeceased by his wife of 46 years, Elizabeth Ann Duchi.
=============================
My brother-in-law—with one quiet final breath—passed on Aug 20, 2009, just before the antique clocks throughout his Fallbrook home chimed 8:00 a.m. He also knew a lot about many things and a little about everything. He was passionate about his cats, his clocks, his cars, and his boats. He loved travel, antiques, and cooking. He was a true Renaissance man. He was Italian, hot-tempered and easy going. He was brilliant and had some blind spots. He was sharp-witted and sharp-edged, flexible and obstinately stubborn, simple and complex. He was well read, well versed, and well… Tony. 

© 2018. Catherine Sevenau.
All rights reserved.

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Comments

  1. Janet Geissmann-Grove says

    December 12, 2018 at 7:26 pm

    So many thanks… Catherine, tears. I believe your nephew, John, has bequeathed me You to poignantly continue the family stories spirit and honor. He adored you.

    • Catherine Sevenau says

      December 12, 2018 at 10:25 pm

      Thank you Janet. I so appreciate having the connection with you. Little would John know!

  2. Avis shinn says

    December 12, 2018 at 11:01 am

    Catherine, the Sandhills flying over the hospital upon your sister’s death brought tears to my eyes. Elequently written!

    • Catherine Sevenau says

      December 12, 2018 at 11:40 am

      Thank you Avis. There are times when I read it that is still brings tears to my eyes. I miss her.

  3. Marian Clemens says

    December 12, 2018 at 10:52 am

    Both tributes are really lovely. Thanks.

  4. Susie Price says

    December 12, 2018 at 9:30 am

    Lovely tributes to your now gone family members…

  5. Barbara Jacobsen says

    December 12, 2018 at 9:28 am

    Your beautiful Crane story brought tears again. Thank you!!!

Through Any Given Door

Web Serial

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Through Any Given Door

  • Web Serial: Part I, Faded Snapshots
    • Complete Part I
    • 1. Front Matter
      • 0.i Teller of Tales, Family Line
      • 0.ii Ded, Billet-Doux, Credits, ToC
      • 0.iii Prologue
    • 2. Sonora 1943-1947
    • 3. Sonora 1948-1953
    • 4. History and Backstory
  • Web Serial: Part II, Torn Pictures
    • Complete Part II, sans photos
    • 1. San Jose, San Francisco 1954-1957
    • 2. Hawaii 1957-1958
  • Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies
    • Complete Part III, sans photos
    • La Habra, San Francisco, San Jose 1958-1968
    • Post Memoir Sketches
  • Through Any Given Door, Part I (in full)

Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies

Post Memoir Sketches in full

4.10 Larry’s Later Life

4.09 Lore, Libel and Lies

4.08 Cutty Sark and Carleen

4.07 Final Migration

4.06 I Must Have Lied

4.05 My Sister Liz

4.04 Elegy to My Father

4.03 Letter from Liz

4.02 Letters From Claudia

4.01 Unleashing the Flying Monkeys

Through Any Given Door, Part III (in full)

3.46 Sin and Prayer

3.45 A Kind of Holiness

3.44 No Flowers

3.43 Rainbows and Red Devils

3.42 Positively Haight Street

3.41 Killing Time

3.40 A Full Mass

3.39 “Oh Yeah?”

3.38 Homesick

3.37 Summer in Europe

3.36 Leaving the Hive

3.35 Riverside Campground, Big Sur

3.34 La Habra High (part 2)

3.33 La Habra High 1961-1966 (part 1)

3.32 Riffraff and Hippies

3.31 Quit Gawking

3.30 It’s Not Fair!

3.29 The Sunset

3.28 A Longer Scorecard

3.27 Sweeney’s Candy Shop

3.26 1644 Haight Street, 1960

3.25 “Listen, Dearie”

3.24 The Hillman Minx

3.23 Purgatory

3.22 “You Writin’ a Book?”

3.21 “Chu-uck”

3.20 Simon Legree

3.19 The Furies

3.18 Gus the Helms Man

3.17 Queen of Hearts

3.16 Smoke Gets in Your Eyes 1960s

3.15 Beach Camping

3.14 Waiting, Waiting, Waiting

3.13 Jesus, Mary, and Joseph

3.12 Chutes and Ladders

3.11 Sunday Drives

3.10 Tie Pin and Cufflinks

3.09 The Amana

3.08 KRLA and KHJ

3.07 Saving Grace

3.06 My 1954 plain

3.04 Nana

3.03 Sierra Vista School 1958

3.05 A Mother’s Instinct 1959

3.02 Orange Groves and Crackerboxes

3.01 La Habra 1958

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