
Robin Redbreast |
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When Nature provides you with just what you are looking for – this is ‘synchronicity’ in action. After taking a couple of photos of ‘light sparkling on the River’, I shut my eyes to take in the sounds – wind in trees, distant sounds of farm animals, the subtle and playful noises of water. After a few moments I heard a fluttering behind me – and opened my eyes to see a Robin perched on top of my camera bag, not even 18 inches away. It stared at me, head cocked, and flew off to a nearby tree to pour out its fantastic song just above my head. I saw another one, slightly smaller, hopping about nearby, shyer than her mate.
When it clucked once, I did. Then twice. Then three times, altering the intervals between clucks like the bird. It hopped nearer and nearer. Looking at me from various positions. And then it flew over and actually stood on my knee. Very carefully I lifted the camera and turned it on, hoping the little electronic noises wouldn’t scare it. It stayed and I got a wonderful close-up - just the picture I needed for 'The Adventure of Arthur'.
Even days later I feel so rewarded with this intimate connection with a wild animal – and I just had to share it with you. So I have to go back there with a gift for this friendly Robin and his mate. I wondered what do Robins eat and stuff. What would make a good gift for this friendly creature, perhaps the best-loved of all birds with its sweet but slightly melancholy song ? I dug out 'British Nesting Birds', my 1910 edition by W. Percival Westell (author of 'Nature Stalking for Boys'). This bird has loads of common names: Bobbie, Bob, Bobrobin, Brow-Rhuddyn (Welsh), Robinet, Ruddock and Tommi-Liden amongst them. WP Westell tells me they eat worms, earwigs, butterflies, larvae, spiders, daddy-long-legs and will take scraps in Winter. They make their nests from moss, dead leaves, stalks of plants with a neat lining of roots, hair, or wool. There’s my answer. Some soft, washed wool for the Robin to line its nest for the coming brood - but not red (because they see this as an intrusion)! Later on I returned. I could hear the Robin some way off in the trees and couldn't seem to attract it by 'clucking'. So I tried to contact the bird with a technique I had read about where you push a picture into an animal's mind through its third eye. I sent it pictures of a little nest with five eggs, all cosy with the newly cut bits of woolly jumper I had brought with me. Within a minute I heard the whir of wings and the Robin was standing on the end of the bench where I sat. I slowly raised my arm and dropped one of the wool pieces down near the bird. There was no communication as such but I gained a strong impression I was being scolded. Here follows a rough translation of what I believe the bird replied:
I checked the moss. Because of the clean air here, there is loads of moss and lichen for lining nests. It was certainly much less likely to get damp than my wool. Suitably chastised I returned home. I saw several Robins on the way home, they kind of made themselves conspicuous by landing in a tree nearby and starting to sing as I walked by - or was it the same Robin ? But later, on a mornings gardening with my son, I persuaded him to pick up some worms and save them for an expedition to see the tame Robin that afternoon. The aim was to get the Robin to take a worm from his hand, which in his words would be 'cool'. We sat there for about 45 minutes, making Robin clucking noises but I could see his attention was wearing thin. He listened to the bird song and we identified a pheasant, several other Robin songs from over the river, the exciting cry of a hunting buzzard and some other bird I couldn't identify that makes a noise like 'Michupichu - Michupichu' ! We decided to 'set the worms free' and headed into the copse behind us to find non-salty soil above the highest tide mark and placed them down where they could wriggle back into the earth.
It came closer as we stretched out our worms for the taking but just then two large dogs ran through the copse, breaking the moment. It was Mel with her daughters, Emily and Hazel, out walking the dogs. Wills was glad to find some people his own age to play with and we went back to Mel's house for a cup of tea. And the Robin was right - we did make friends!
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A River Fowey Valley novel. An ancient matrix of energy lies hidden in the earth, its existence and purpose all but forgotten. One strand, named ‘The Dragon Line’ passes through Cornwall, a land steeped in history and mystery since the dawn of time. Here the line passes through the valley of the River Fowey. A lone ghost, abandoned in the valley of his birth, tells how the line of energy has been usurped, unbalancing the whole planetary energy matrix. In The Lily, the first novel of an extraordinary trilogy, we share his lives as he tells his tale of 2000 years in the Fowey valley. He sets a crucial task, to mend the Dragon Line and restore the balance of power, before time itself runs out. READ THE FIRST 5 CHAPTERS OF THIS AMAZING NOVEL ONLINE FOR FREE |
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