SUNDAY BLOG: GOODBYE PROMS HELLO STRICTLY

I will take this recent writing out on a cold day next January and recall the last day of summer in Donegal.  The sky is blue, the lanes are flanked by branches drooping under the weight of black blackberries, stop and sample and they are sweet and the juice stain your fingers blood red.  Although it’s a sunny day there’s a nip in the air, the bay is calm but the Atlantic beyond is choppy with white horses racing towards the shore line.  Only weeks ago the hills were covered with purple rhododendron mixed with the butter yellow whins, now montbretia brightens the landscape, warm orange with some white cow parsley, leaves on the trees drifting down in the breeze all making a pretty picture.  

The sun has warmed the grass and there’s a fresh smell in the air and in a delightful cameo a couple of days ago a young couple were married on the beach with six cows watching from the sidelines and there were dolphins in the bay on Saturday.

Was this the calm before the storm? 

Last night the wind was whining round the house and the rain rattling on the windows, there was thunder and lightening and the flashes light up the mountains and the sea like a huge spot light switching on and off and the peels of thunder are biblical.  All gone by sunrise so I can sit here on this rock and listen to nature.  

But There’s A Lot Missing.  

I haven’t heard one skylark although there are still a couple of swallows dipping and diving.  Nor have I seen any gannets so spectacular as they climb up into the sky then rocket down, streamline body piercing the sea like diver Tom Daly In the Olympics.  The fish aren’t as plentiful according to local fishermen and lobsters don’t want to know.  It ties in with the distressing news that five more sea birds are on the red list of failing numbers due to pollution, climate change and huge fishing trawlers meaning there isn’t the same food source as before.  

Sadly puffins have been in decline for some years but there are signs of improvement.   I’ve only seen a colony of puffins once when my friend John Lavery took me across to the bottom of the Slieve League cliffs and these little clowns of God were ducking and diving not one bit scared of the boat bobbing amongst them.  It was a memorable morning and a sobering thought that, although some sign of improvement, today the numbers are down by 50%.  It was in Donegal late one evening when we found a tiny bird sheltering under the car.  The children gently brought it into the house, it was exhausted and we kept it safe overnight.  It was small and black with webbed feet and there was excitement in the village when it turned out to be a storm petrel not known to come inland, they even feed on the wing – however not much chance of finding one these days.  

BASS ROCK

It was an experience to sail to the Bass Rock off the coast of North Berwick in western Scotland some years ago and see the world’s largest colony of Northern gannets; since then avian bird flu decimated the numbers, down by 25%.  The rock is volcanic therefore black to the eye but in this case white with the birds, their chicks and their droppings.  I hear the numbers are climbing again but it will be a long time before the figure reaches previous levels of over 150,000.

British Trust for Ornithology survey.

Apparently we might well be waving goodbye to the common gull and the elegant Arctic terns; the findings of the 2023 census, the biggest for 20 years, shows that 62 per cent of sea birds are in decline. On land, of the 245 farmland, woodland and garden birds, 75 are now on the red list. 

I hope I’m spared to sit on this rock and cogitate in 12 months time. Please let it be positive.

That was then, this is now, September and despite the better weather in the last week there is no doubt that winter drawers on as they say. And that brings up the appalling pronouncement of the current government making yet another awful decision, to cut the winter fuel allowance to thousands upon thousands of people who relying on it. They seem to forget we have all paid into their fund to help us in our later years, what have they done with these contributions?

Shopping For Love

Turn It Upside And You Are Sending A Message

What’s this all about?  Upside down pineapples!!  People are talking about this secret code to find love, I thought it was a lovely idea because thanks to Covid and working from home people have not been meeting one another to form relationships and apparently dating sites are less popular.  So some bright spark thought up a plan that supermarkets would be a great venue for forming friendships.

This is now catching on!  Go shopping for your pineapple put it in your trolly upside down and if there is another pineapple person they’ll bash into you and the rest is a mystery.  In my innocence I thought this was a great idea until someone pointed out this wasn’t a friendship plan but a much more personal and physical arrangement.  Pineapples are now off my list, upside down or not.

STAMP IT OUT

Why do the Post Office people continue to shoot themselves in their feet. They plead poverty and urgent financial challenges so they increase the cost of first class stamps by 30 pence. Who is going to pay £1.65 – yes £1.65 – unless absolutely necessary. Can’t they see more and more of us would use the postal system if the prices were reasonable. Birthday cards, sympathy letters, post cards and love letters, email is not a substitute so I wish those who make these stupid decisions would get a grip and rethink this price rise. Of course they won’t because most of them will just toss their correspondence into a governmental post bag and never have to put their hands in their pockets. Charities will suffer yet again when Christmas comes and we can’t afford to send cards to friends and relations. I have favoured phoning instead and having a catchup and offering best wishes but cards are hard to beat.

Madam Butterfly and her chid.

I didn’t see Strictly Come Dancing last night, I opted for the Last Night of the Proms. I’m glad I did because it was a feast of music, a real joy. There have been many and varied singers during this year some I liked, Sam Smith I didn’t, and some left me wondering but Angel Blue was refreshing and her rendering of Oh My Beloved Father was delightful and made me think of my own dear father. I used to amuse him by trying to sing this Puccini favourite. Then there was the delicate soulful Humming Chorus from his Madam Butterfly and that made me smile remembering going to see this opera in Berlin where the delicate Madam was sung by a very buxom middle aged soprano who had an alarmingly loud voice and I feared for the little boy’s hearing as she clasped him to her bosom and belted out her aria. Music has the wonderful ability to transport you in time and place.

Thank you Nuala McKeever for posting this positive message!