29 March
Opening
the door today I was greeted with a soft warm rain and a great tit carrying a
little twig. Everything is growing. The trees have started to blossom, in the
wilderness, hidden away from sight, the cherry trees (at least I suppose that’s
what they are) have suddenly burst into a bridal gown of white. And beneath the mulberry tree a cowslip has
thrown up flowers
25 March
The wrens seem to have been particularly
active. They sing continually and have
become the dom inant voice in the garden, displacing the robins. I saw one today with nesting material, longer
than its own body length. Jays are also
often visible and I managed to get a good picture of one in the mulberry
tree. Elsewhere the garden is bursting
into life, the forsythia has suddenly erupted, enlivening the whole place… and making the daffodils seem more natural in
the process.
22 March
A windy day. The garden gate slams with alarming
venom. But it is warmer. The snowdrops, apart from a few isolated
corners, have now all disappeared and become all but invisible in the green
swell of the bluebell leaves. But the
daffodils are all flowering and the lawn has come alive with the shy flowers
and creeping foliage of violets. I
prefer the violets, there is nothing wrong with daffodils by they are
ornamental whilst the violets seem woven into the fabric of the garden.
Yesterday there was a green woodpecker on
the lawn. It flew up into a sycamore
tree with a flash of yellow. There it
yaffled loudly and as I crept nearer flew off in bounding leaps, but I could
hear it for sometime later.
18 March
It has been a noisy day. The wind has got up and snatches of sound can
be heard swirling in the air. Jays also
seem to have reappeared in the garden and their cackling is often heard, the
other day one appeared at our kitchen window in all its resplendent
finery. The parakeets have also been
noisy, flying in from the park, although I have never actually seen one in the
garden has such. But the day started
with the most dominating noise. The
surgery had got in contractors to tidy up their little pieces of green
grass. One of these begoggled and ear
muffed men was deploying a leaf blower, but it seemed to me particularly ill
suited to his task, he spent ages on the small piece of ground outside the
nursery. A rake and broom would surely
have achieved his task more efficiently. But instead we had the sound of a jet engine echoing from all the
buildings and smothering the garden with noise.
16 M arch
The violets have started to flower. There are not many of them but tucked away
under the mulberry tree a few plants creep in under the snowdrops. And everywhere else flowers are appearing,
daffodils are beginning to open, the forsythia was showing its first bloom and
out of the dark earth the dark shoots of fritillaries are beginning to appear.
13 March
It was a lovely gentle, soft, morning. Insects were dancing above the lawn, a robin
and goldfinch sung above the brambles and a jay swooped low through the
garden. It was one of those moments when
it feels blissful to be alive. As I came
into the garden what looked like a flock of chaffinchs flew up from the
mulberry and the woodpecker could be seen, again, exploring its nooks and
crannies. With the snowdrops fading and
little else yet in bloom the garden is not particularly colourful but the warm
light and zigzagging insects made it feel alive.
11 March
The buds on the mulberry tree are growing
black and buxom. But for the time being
the leaves are hidden and it is the best time of the year for seeing
birds. The woodpecker was scavenging
around the mulberry tree and a pair of goldfinches singing to each other in its
branches. Goldfinchs seen to be very
common this year, a friend mentioned this to me and yesterday in West London I
saw two more.
8 March
This morning in the garden a bright blue
day and the air full of birdsong. In the
treetops a small flock of green finches went by. A greater spotted woodpecker high up in the
beeches and later the sound of drumming echoing from a distant tree. The mahonia is beginning to bloom, tight
curls of yellow gradually emerging. I
was entranced, I don’t think I have ever seen so many different birds gathered
in one place and everything so abundant and wild.
5 March
The snowdrops are just starting to look
tired, their petals stretched wide and looking ever so slightly ragged. The celandine has also opened up its petals
and shines it’s sunny smile up towards the sky. The great tits continue to be vocal and I notice the wrens singing more
and more, it’s fast rapid trills echoing through the garden. The peregrine visited us once more on
Wednesday evening, but he has not scared off the wood pigeons who continued to
walk sedately about the grass before thumping up into the trees whenever I
appear.
3 March
In the garden this morning; full of song,
robin, wren, tits and occasional goldfinch, but no blackbird yet.
The elder is also beginning to leaf, little swirls of green just
starting to emerge. But it is still bitterly cold.
1 March
Now it seems that spring really is
here. A cold bright day with an electric
blue sky and out of the corner of my eye I saw a disturbance amongst the
snowdrops. Putting on my glasses and
coming closer it really was: my first bumblebee of the year. It seemed particularly greedy as it went nuzzling
from one snowdrop to the next, or maybe it is just that I have got used to the
somnambulant pace of winter. My solitary
crocus has also flowered, casting its petals aside with ecstatic abandon to
reveal the dusty yellow of its stamens.
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