Gialova, Greece, Sometime in Early August 2011
I’m casting my mind back now to my first encounter with a
wild Barn Owl. It was last year, and I was volunteering in Greece, enjoying the
summer of my life. It was July, or early
August, and I was with three or four people, young volunteers like me, and we’d
been cycling between point counts on our circuit of the Gialova Lagoon. I’d met and photographed my first Kentish
Plover, or “Alexandrinus,” pronounced
with a Spanish accent, as it was known
among ourselves, and seen the little fluffy chicks wandering about on the
cracked mud on their oversized feet. I remember Cleopatra’s Brimstone
butterflies, and Scarce Swallowtails being almost everywhere, and the wide
muddy lagoon, never blue like in the postcards, always with the sound of the
ripples lapping on the shore. We made our way to a disused fish farm which
stood beside the beach, and represented our last point count of the day. I’d
already been informed that “Tyto,” as
he was known in our quasi-scientific idiom, lived here, and Estela, the HOS
Ornithologist, had shown me their wonderfully messy former nest site, in an
apparently filthy room upstairs in the old fish farm, with owl pellets and
droppings over the wall, and a filthy space in which the owls had raised their
chicks a year or two before. But it had been a while since the owls had been
seen, apparently, having been familiar to Estela in the months and years
previously. I was at the back of the
crowd, scanning the rafters of the old fish farm, happy to have seen a little
Athene noctua, which we all enjoyed, when a white shape appeared to drop from
the rafters and fly across the hugely spacious room that would have been the
main floor of the factory. It paused on
one of the crossbars which held up the roof and, in what was intended as a
combination of a whisper and a shout, and futilely, I tried to call back my
colleagues to see the owl. White, a little ghostly, utterly silent, and
incredibly beautiful, the owl appeared to hear me and was off through a space
in the wall.
A couple of days later, on a cool morning before the
Mediterranean heat began to beat down, I returned to the old fish farm, a
little against the advice of others who warned it could be dangerous. I should
stress looking for owls in abandoned buildings in the small hours of the morning,
and alone, is not something this blogger recommends. I sat down on a pile of
rubble in the main body of the building and waited for “Tyto.” It was about six
in the morning, the same time we carried out our bird monitoring at the lagoon.
It will come as no surprise, that, any paranoia about homeless drug dealers
chasing conservation volunteers out of the fish farm in the morning quickly
abated, and I fell asleep.
I woke up what must have been about an hour later and already the sun was high and the air was beginning to get quite warm. I rose to my feet and looked about. “Tyto” was only a few metres away, and when he saw me move, he took to the wing in a second, but, perhaps curious about me, he alighted in the far corner of the room. I approached him a little, inching forward, and I raised my camera and extended my lens. In the dim light of the fish factory, I needed a steady hand, but I managed to take a single record shot before he moved off, his broad, white wings carrying him silently through his gap between wall and ceiling, and away out of sight.
I woke up what must have been about an hour later and already the sun was high and the air was beginning to get quite warm. I rose to my feet and looked about. “Tyto” was only a few metres away, and when he saw me move, he took to the wing in a second, but, perhaps curious about me, he alighted in the far corner of the room. I approached him a little, inching forward, and I raised my camera and extended my lens. In the dim light of the fish factory, I needed a steady hand, but I managed to take a single record shot before he moved off, his broad, white wings carrying him silently through his gap between wall and ceiling, and away out of sight.
Tyto alba, Gialova Lagoon, August 2011 |
4th June 2012
I’d been trying to shake an inexplicable feeling of immense
mild awkwardness and irritation all day. It was the evening, and I decided to
throw my bike around Pages Wood, part of the Millennium Community woodlands
project, operated by the Forestry Commission, and set between Upminster and
Harold Wood, beside the busy Southend Arterial Road. Young trees have been planted on former
farmland, with a few old trees dominating as standards. The river Ingrebourne
flows through it, lined with just such oak standards. As it reaches the side of
the dual carriageway, a small network of hedges with a few standards spreads
out, a bridge crosses the Ingrebourne and the path continues across meadows in
which Horses are periodically grazed. I
rode laps of the track, I wasn’t birding, merely having a bit of a ride to blow
out the cobwebs on a pleasant, sunny evening. I paused beside the river to
watch the swallows picking off insects from the little living clouds which
danced above it. I saw a couple of green woodpeckers, pecking about in the
grass, the flowery meadows which line what will one day become, when the trees
are more mature, the woodland rides, and I heard the Jackdaws alarm calling
each time a dog passed them.
The light had begun to fade and I decided to cross the Ingrebourne
and head back up the A127 to get home. As I did so, between the mature oak
trees, I saw a white bird, very briefly, and I wondered what it was. The view was
brief, it could even have been a white pigeon, but I moved forward a little to
get a closer look. As the bird reappeared, its identity became clear. It had
long, broad wings, was bigger than a pigeon, and its shape was unmistakeable.
The flat faces of owls, honed by evolution to channel sound to their remarkable
ears, give them a unique appearance in profile. It was a white lady, of
medieval superstition, a barn owl, white and angelic against the fading light!
I moved on a little, as the owl flew out of sight. I positioned myself on the
path with a good vista of the dark green oaks and the buttercup infested
meadow, and waited. I didn’t have to wait long. The owl reappeared, making
another hunting pass low in front of the trees, eyes fixed on the ground, in
search of the mice and voles on which they feed. She rounded a small Hawthorn
on the meadow and, for a moment, was flying straight at me. She turned and I
attempted to reel off a couple of shots with the DSLR, but as I raised it she
saw me and turned tail, drifting silently over the trees and away to the East,
where more woodland stood, before the trees gave way to urban parkland and
sprawl. She was gone, and I had only blurry long shots on the camera, but she
was beautiful, and my first British barn owl.
The experience was almost spiritual, the barn owl, a childhood favourite
and ghostly beauty, floating over these woods and meadows on the cusp of London’s
metropolis, something so wild, so beautiful, so revered and feared over the
years for her unique colour and crepuscular habits. It was with a much less
heavy heart that I made my way home in the fading light of a beautiful June
evening, across the community woodland past the dog walkers, and the rubbish
strewn bridge over the Arterial Road.
Barn Owl, Pages Wood, near Upminster, Essex, England, June 4th 2012 |
Wild flower Meadows at Pages Wood. |
The Mature Trees into which she disappeared, Pages Wood. |
No comments:
Post a Comment