Friday 19 November 1999

A Drive in November

Today we had to go to an RSPCA home between Weathersfield and Sible Hedingham. It was a bright, autumn afternoon and everywhere we looked we saw pheasants, pheasants in fields, ditches and road edges.

One pheasant winged its way across in front of the car not two feet from the windscreen, long tail feathers streaming out behind and absurdly small wings outstretched.

We watched another beautifully and brightly coloured male in a prettily wooded turning, by a bend in the road guarding his harem of five plain, dull-brown females.
Partridges were also prolific hopping over hedges, disappearing into hedge bottoms, hiding in ditches and running along road edges.

Passing a heron motionless on the roadside, he turned his head to watch us, I felt I could have stroked his back as we passed, so close were we – and he, totally unfazed, just stood and stared.

Leaves
Tugged and blown
Scurrying
Across the windswept road
Like little brown mice
Gold autumn hedges and gold sun-reflected cloud edges
Sun and smatterings of rain pattering against the windscreen
Once hail and briefly snow patterned our visions

We drive down puddled, pot-holed, leaf-covered one-car roads with grassy center track and trees tickling the windows on either side, suddenly the trees and hedges ended. In a field just ahead with his big, white-patched ears was a hare creeping and nibbling, we pulled into the field edge and watched him, he continued feeding heedless of our watchful nosiness.

We crossed fords and crept along flooded roads, fascinated by waterlogged fields, frequented by opportunistic ducks.

In a hollow where two fields met we saw a deep flood – more like a lake, two herons stood sentinel at the edge and a little way up the incline were a family of swans, two adults and two brown almost-grown immature, while tucked in the centre of the swan family was a lone black, beige and white canada goose.

Time was marching on, and we could now see the most wonderful skies gold edged, pink fluffy clouds opposite gold and turquoise sunsets. We watched sheep grazing on green hills rising up from even greener fields, cows watched us with their soft brown eyes, their heads often lowered huddled together for warmth under the sheltering trees.

We laughed at pheasant roadrunners rushing by, stepping high, wondered at a lone rabbit – a rare sight, where were the others?

Saw many kestrel hovering overhead, wings outstretched, hanging in the air by an invisible thread that wasn’t even there.

We drove on through the afternoon and into the fading light, before arriving home we bought produce at garden gates: cabbage, carrots, swede, sprouts and wallflower plants to remind us next spring of this memorable afternoon. All the produce was wonderfully fresh and at bargain prices – but the real joy was in the nature and beauty of the English countryside.

We passed a field black with rooks while from the ever-darkening sky hundreds more were flying in from every angle.

The sky had again changed and as the road twisted and turned we faced enormous deep pink, turning red cloud mountains, between sightings of the western horizon which was on fire.

Drove down narrow steeply-sided roads bounded by ages old oak trees.

Saw kestrels hovering overhead,
A lone rabbit,
Herons, swans, a canada goose,
Partidges,
A hare,
Floods and ducks,
Smatterings of rain,
Patterings of hail,
Patternings of snow,
Red, yellow, orange, brown and gold leaves,
This is autumn in the Colne Valley on the Essex/Suffolk border in England.

Thursday 18 November 1999

Chilly November

Today is bright and sunny although it’s cold outside, it doesn’t have yesterday’s biting wind which coupled with no sun, made yesterday weather-wise a very unpleasant day, when Mike picked up Rick at 3:20pm the temperature gauge outside Tesco showed 5 degrees.

The trees are almost bare now, but the lawn is dressed very prettily in reds, yellows, browns, oranges and golds – and the blackbirds are very busy overturning the lawn’s leafy covering looking for fat worms and insects.

There are still many beautiful flowers out in the garden: a dark black/red clematis and a beautiful pale pink one with a deep pink stripe down the center of each petal, pink white and maroon chrysanthemums, sweetly scented clusters of mid-pink viburnum bodnantense and pink white and red roses, of course there are still many bushes laden with brilliant shiny berries red orange and yellow and the malus tree branches are heavily weighted with fruit, the berries and the malus fruit will keep the birds fed for a while.

Here and there, the last leaves dance on the bare branches twirling and spinning merrily, soon a southern gust of wind will catch them unawares and they too will be part of the lawn’s rich carpet.

Yesterday, returning home from the hospital we turned our back on the motorway and instead traveled home the ‘old way’. The roads were narrower, slower, prettier, and often tree-lined. We passed many parks and commons with lakes full of wild fowl and numerous gardens some already tidied and put to bed for the winter, others like ours, rather wild and unkempt, but havens for wildlife with birds in them from morning to night.

Best of all we journeyed through High Beach, a well-known, naturally beautiful area, acres and acres of beech trees most of the leaves had fallen; the roads were narrow with no footpaths. And the crisp autumn leaves littered the roadside and swept away into an orange carpet on the forest floor. It was breathtakingly beautiful, the sun’s rays shining through the bare branches gave the leafy carpet a red glow. (High Beach is part of Epping Forest, an ancient forest where Queen Elizabeth I (154x-1603) used to hunt for boar and venison, a cruel and outmoded sport now thankfully becoming more and more frowned upon. Queen Elizabeth I’s hunting lodge is still standing in Epping Forest.)

Tuesday 1 June 1999

Haiku

Conkers
Autumn fruits round brown
From horse chestnut tree dropped down
Child collectibles

Goats
Goats sure-footed, furred
Produce much earth-tasting milk
Eat most anything

Morning

Frost, crisp underfoot
Crunchy, crackling autumn leaves
Trees sparkling in sun

Polluters
Cars noisy, rushing
Polluting and destroying
Ferrying people

Friday 19 March 1999

Spring in England

Spring in England is wonderful; lush, green and sweet smelling, the sweetness varies according to where you are: countryside, riverbank or an English country garden. In springtime each has its own particular charm. No one is better than another, just different and all most enjoyable.

Our garden is no exception. Come out of our front door and the heady sweet scent of hyacinth fills the air and surrounds the senses. Come in the gate and sweet delicate fragrance of violets tickles one’s “nosebuds” and causes one to sniff appreciatively, while turning this way and that, bending and stretching until the source is discovered. How could such a beautiful, delicate, lingering perfume come from such a tiny flower as the violet? But is does.

There are hundreds of bright, golden yellow daffodils and tens of narcissi of varying shapes, colours and sizes. Spanish and English bluebells are beginning to carpet large areas in blue, and the evergreen viburnum has forsaken its pink buds and burst into bloom, overcoating its dark green leaves with white and making a beautiful show along half the boundary of the garden. The deciduous viburnum Carlesci is even more showy and smells wonderful as does the deep pink viburnum Bodnatense, which produces small clusters of powerfully scented flowers from October to April.

The forsythia is 10 feet tall and 7 feet wide – a bright yellow spectacle, no leaves, just bare stems, but with flowers so dense no wood can be seen.
The magic snowdrops are finished, also the aconites, but there is so much else taking their place that it isn’t sad.
The magnolia stellata is in full bloom now and is breathtakingly beautiful – my favorite part of the day to enjoy it is dusk, because as the light fades and everything else is lost to the darkness and shadows so the magnolia stellata shines out with a pure, white luminosity.

The long-tailed tits, which all winter have visited the garden in flocks, are now reduced to a single pair. They are, as always, nesting in the front hedge, fairly high up and hopefully out of the reach of passing hands. One sad year, no sooner had they finished building their nest than some thoughtless passerby attempted to steal their beautiful ball of softness interwoven with countless cobwebs. This person destroyed the nest and succeeded only in taking three-quarters of it. I felt so upset for the tits. They had worked so hard and I was looking forward to the young taking their first flight. Where, or if, they built a replacement I don’t know, but it certainly wasn’t in my hedge. It is amusing to note that apart from the cobwebs and other delicate, natural fripperies, they also use man-made articles. Each spring I make sure there is a tennis ball in the centre of the lawn, the long-tailed tits make repeated trips, with one on a nearby branch to keep watch, while the other delicately balanced on the tennis ball, slowly and painstakingly collecting the fluffy coating. When they have laid bare the smooth underneath, I turn the ball and they continue until it is a smooth sphere.

The greenfinches have been working very hard collecting fur I combed from our dog and hung on the honeysuckle to help them with their nest building.
Both the crows and the magpies have been breaking twigs from high up in the birch tree. The crows drive the magpies away, but as soon as the crows turn their backs the magpies return. The starlings have been collecting beakfuls of dried plant material, while the blackbirds have been carrying all manner of things, even small pieces of paper, silver foil, and pieces of polythene, and not least of all, beakfuls of mud from the pond.

Monday 1 March 1999

March Mornings

Precious wonderful mornings – mornings filled to overflowing with the birds’ joyful, exultant song of life. Mornings when one wonders how the air can be so filled, with so much music it seems to overflow from every tree branch and bush twig – wonderful, wonderful March mornings overflowing with birdsong.