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‘Today I celebrate the presence of grass': Writer Ruskin Bond looks at the world from his window
‘Today I celebrate the presence of grass': Writer Ruskin Bond looks at the world from his window

Scroll.in

time23-04-2025

  • General
  • Scroll.in

‘Today I celebrate the presence of grass': Writer Ruskin Bond looks at the world from his window

July 31 Flower of the day: Indian pink 'Always lovely,' according to flower-lore. And when given to your sweetheart it says: 'You are always lovely.' I shall start each day of this journal with a flower and its symbolism, traditional or just my own personal meaning. Why? Simply because it is a nice way to start the day. Even if there's no flower on the window ledge, there are flowers on the hillside, down in the valley, and in the greater world beyond the horizon. Flowers are the ultimate symbol of creation. And when the last flower has faded and fallen, our world will be no more. But this is no time to be pessimistic and melancholic. The last 'pink' of summer is still blooming on my windowsill. And right next to it I see a little green shoot coming up. It's just a blade of grass. But what would we do without grass? Our sheep, our cattle, our wild creatures, all depend on it. So do we, for wheat is grass; barley and maize and rice are all grass. Sugarcane is grass. Bamboo is grass, as any elephant will tell you. Most of our planet is covered with grass, except where we have replaced it with concrete. Sometimes a blade of grass will peek through the concrete as well. Take away all the grass and we are left with an uninhabited planet. So today I celebrate the presence of grass – so fresh and green at this time of the year, made lush by the monsoon rains. Grasslands, meadows, tall grass, short grass, sweet grass, the grass on your lawn, the grass of a desert oasis giving hope to thirsty travellers, the grass growing in an abandoned fort or palace, giving hope of nature's ability to recover and restore. Where there is grass there is water. Where there is water there is life. As I write, the rain begins to come down – steadily, relentlessly – drumming on the old tin roof, even making inroads through a couple of weak spots and dripping onto a pile of books and folders stacked up on a side table. I rush to their aid, cover them with a plastic sheet (plastic has its uses!) and then look for a bucket to take the steady drip from the ceiling. This building has stood here for well over a hundred years, but sometimes it has to give way to wind and rain. When I came to live in it some fifty years ago, the rusty old tin sheets were blown away in a blizzard, and I got up at daybreak to find my blanket under a blanket of snow. The roof was repaired and strengthened. I love watching the gentle fall of the snowflakes. But snow is cold, and I don't want it in the bedroom. August 1 Flower of the day: The bean The bean? 'My love is like a bean-field in blossom,' wrote the poet John Clare. And the bean has been a pretty flower, white or pale blue, and the long green bean is in itself an elegant thing. It's bean-time now, up here in the hills, and the village women are busy collecting the ripe beans, while the menfolk bring them to the town for sale in the vegetable market. Almost every day someone is at the front door, offering us a bundle of beans at a ridiculously low price. Beans, cucumbers, radishes, these are the chief products of the season, down in the villages. After the rains, there will be maize and millets; and then, nothing. For little grows in the winter months, when the grass turns yellow and the ground is hard with frost. The villagers manage with the grain they have stored away. The beans pile up in our kitchen. Beena sends some of them down to her mother at the flat near Mullingar. We have them cooked with potatoes – aloo-bean – but I like them best with roast chicken and mashed potatoes. But this is Shravan, Beena's month for fasting, and she won't be preparing meat dishes for a few more days. So I must be patient and build up my appetite for chicken roast and mutton keema with green peas. Why is it that at the age of 88, my appetite is keener than ever? Is there something wrong with me? Yesterday I had four buttered toasts for breakfast, one with marmite, one with a sandwich spread, one with garlic pickle and one with sweet mango chutney. Mysterious are the ways of human physiology. Shrishti – Rakesh and Beena's daughter, now 25 – brought a bag of plums from the village near the Yamuna where a group of local village women and she have been experimenting with different plants, fruits, herbs, etc. The plums were very good, sweet and juicy, and I put away a few of them. Not too many, because I know from experience that too many plums can give you the runs. When we first came to Ivy Cottage, there were plum trees growing on the open hillside above the house. Then the owner of the land removed them and built a guesthouse above us. Now we see tourists instead of plums. Never mind, we need tourists too. At least the hill station does. And those plum trees had gone wild, the fruit being edible only for the monkeys. But when they were in blossom, they lit up the hillside with their creamy white flowers, and I would emulate the poet by exclaiming: 'My love is like a plum tree in blossom.' But that was a long time ago. There isn't much blossom about at this time of the year, but the ferns are flourishing everywhere, even on the trunks of the oaks and deodars. In the winter and early summer, one has to go down to streams or shady places to see the ferns. In August, they come to see us.

Wildlife Trusts object to new homes plan near Peterborough
Wildlife Trusts object to new homes plan near Peterborough

BBC News

time20-03-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Wildlife Trusts object to new homes plan near Peterborough

A conservation manager says plans to develop thousands of homes close to a nature reserve will "undermine nature recovery in the area".The Wildlife Trust in Cambridgeshire has objected to a proposal north of Castor and Ailsworth, in Peterborough City Council's draft local development would see homes built near Castor Hanglands National Nature Reserve, which would have a "devastating impact" and create a barrier to species moving around the landscape, the trust Baker said the proposed land, owned by Homes England, would be better suited as a green lung for Peterborough and provide some "much needed accessible natural greenspace". The city council has been approached for comment. The 90-hectare (222-acre) nature reserve, managed by Natural England, is a habitat for rare plants and butterflies and includes woodlands, grasslands, scrub and wetlands. The Wildlife Trust added it had one of the most species-rich ponds in England and many of the species there were first recorded by the poet John Clare, who lived nearby and regularly visited more than 200 years manager Mr Baker added that the land near the reserve was an "inherently unsustainable location" to develop."No significant new strategic green infrastructure has been provided for Peterborough since the early 1980s and Ferry Meadows Country Park is already very busy before the new residents have arrived," he said."A nature-focussed use of the land would help to deliver nature recovery in line with Government national environmental objectives to reverse species decline by 2030, the Local Nature Recovery Strategy which the council is signed up to, and the John Clare Countryside Vision which has been developed by conservation groups and local communities." Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Country diary: An eruption of the most delightful, sociable ‘bumbarrels'
Country diary: An eruption of the most delightful, sociable ‘bumbarrels'

The Guardian

time17-02-2025

  • General
  • The Guardian

Country diary: An eruption of the most delightful, sociable ‘bumbarrels'

Suddenly, out of the margins of a thorn thicket that surrounds the common, a flock of long-tailed tits, 20- or 30-strong, erupts into darting, swirling flight, borne along on a soft and eager susurrus of liquid call-notes. I love th ese little birds, so tiny, so vulnerable, so active, so tribally cooperative in their nesting and breeding, so charming in their twirling round the small branches of the copse. In terms of size, without those long tail feathers this tiny bird might well rank as our smallest avian species, but the tail, which it folds over its head in the nest, gives a misleading impression of one of our absolute featherweights. It is truly minute. The Northamptonshire peasant poet John Clare is as perfectly observant as ever in providing an exquisite vignette of their fidgety presence in his poem Emmonsail's Heath in Winter: 'And coy bumbarrels, twenty in a drove, / Flit down the hedgerows in the frozen plain / And hang on little twigs and start again.' One of the great nature poems in English. The metre here mirrors so precisely the ceaseless activity of these miniature acrobats. What it cannot capture is the nature of their communal existence. Long-tailed tits are the perfect paradigm of a mutually helpful society. They operate in cold months as tribal groups, mutually sustaining, roosting close together to maintain body warmth. When it comes to nest-building, that too is a social activity, and the results are elaborate and perfectly beautiful. Woven into the dome-shaped oval structure are sage-green lichens, down and feathers, hanks of sheep's wool, dry flakes of grey lichen from the trunks of oak trees, green mosses. The whole intricate structure is securely positioned into a fork of branches within the densest thickets of thorn. To find one is an unlikely delight. Watch for the birds and their direction of travel – if you're lucky and careful, you might find one. And if you do, leave it at that, lest the next generation of these exquisite birds is rendered homeless and condemned to repeat the long constructional labour of its parents. Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at and get a 15% discount

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