January has been a rather misty, murky month. Here are some skyscapes. The first photo is of the first sunset of 2022, and the second is the last of this month.
The third photo is a picturesque afternoon sky - spot the contrail!
January has been a rather misty, murky month. Here are some skyscapes. The first photo is of the first sunset of 2022, and the second is the last of this month.
The third photo is a picturesque afternoon sky - spot the contrail!
We are in the bleak mid-winter, but on my daily wanderings along the byways and hedgerows of this corner of South Somerset I have noticed a goodly number of blackbirds. They are obviously not singing yet, but the warmer months should see them break into their wonderful song.
I was reminded of Theodore
Roosevelt’s delightful tribute to the English blackbird in his
autobiography. I quote from it below.
In 1910 the former American
president, having spent several weeks in England, was due to sail home from
Southampton on June 10. Being a lover of
birds and birdsong he managed to arrange a day of birdwatching in Hampshire the
day before his departure.
Roosevelt travelled by train
to Basingstoke accompanied by his friend Sir Edward Grey, the British Foreign
Secretary. With Sir Edward acting as
guide the two avid ornithologists drove to the valley of the River Itchen to
view the birdlife of the area and listen to its birdsong.
Having walked for several
hours in the area Roosevelt described the valley as follows: “It is very beautiful in every way, with a
rich, civilised, fertile beauty – the rapid brook twisting among its reed beds,
the rich green of trees and grass, the stately woods, the gardens and fields,
the exceedingly picturesque cottages, the great handsome houses standing in
their parks. Birds were plentiful; I
know but few places in America where one would see such an abundance of
individuals . . . “.
The two men then drove to the
New Forest where they had tea at an inn before tramping on through the forest
to Brockenhurst.
Roosevelt wrote of his tramp:
“The New Forest is a wild, uninhabited
stretch of heath and woodland, many of the trees are gnarled and aged, and its
very wildness, the lack of cultivation, the ruggedness, made it strongly
attractive in my eyes, and suggested my own country”.
Roosevelt and Sir Edward
reached Brockenhurst at nightfall and spent the night at an inn which was in
Roosevelt’s words: “. . . as comfortable
as possible, and the bath and supper very enjoyable after our tramp; and
altogether I passed no pleasanter twenty-four hours during my entire European
trip”.
The bird which impressed
Roosevelt most during his walking tour was the blackbird. “I did
not know what beautiful singers they were”, he writes. He goes on to say: “I knew he was a singer, but I had no idea
how fine a singer he was”. Roosevelt
concludes: “. . . it is far easier to
recognise him as the master singer that he is.
It is a fine thing for England to have such an asset of the countryside,
a bird so common, so much in evidence, so fearless, and such a beautiful
singer”.