SKYLARK SUE’S REFLECTIONS OF NATURE
March 2013
March brings breezes loud and shrill
Stirs the dancing daffodil
This March didn’t just bring breezes – it brought bitter, snow-carrying winds. Some parts of the country had 15ft snowdrifts, so we were lucky in our corner of Essex to escape with just a few inches. Much of March last year was balmy, with sun and blue skies, but this year we have seen the coldest March for fifty years. Normally, March is the time of year to get out and about, but the biting winds later in the month made any trip unpleasant, and often dangerous.
However, the first few days of March were more promising. The old saying is that if March comes in like a lion it goes out like a lamb, but it certainly didn’t come roaring in, in fact there was little wind at all, though it was rather a damp, gloomy day. A grey squirrel spent several minutes on the bedroom windowsill, using it for its morning ablutions. It was whisking its paws over its face and along its tail, having a really good wash. There were no special birds in the garden to celebrate the new month, just our usual crop of starlings, blue tits, sparrows, blackbirds, wood pigeons and robins. One of our robins has a white edging to its wings and a white mark above the eye, which is distinctive. Later, we discovered that it is the female as we saw the male feeding her. We are hoping that the robins will nest in the garden as they have started to hang around near the pyracantha at the end of the garden, though whether the sparrows will be happy about their presence remains to be seen. The pyracantha is the traditional haunt of our sparrows. A couple of years ago we fixed a sparrow nest box in the hedge, though as yet it has not been used.
March 3rd turned out to be really spring like, certainly the warmest day of the year so far. A few crocuses finally bloomed, and the birds were singing. The next day the female blackbird was bathing in the fountain, and then drying out on the corner of the shelter nearby. Once dry, she flew to the square feeder which is temporarily standing on the table – as soon as spring really asserts itself, the feeder will be moved to the lawn. It was even milder on the 6th March, very warm in the sun. The crocuses were fully out and a great tit was calling loudly.
The next day it was good to see two smooth newts in the wildlife pond, all being well they will breed. Last year there were lots of young newts in the summer, and I’m hoping that some of them will have survived this cold winter. Perhaps they will have found some mossy hideaways where they could bed down safely. When my husband was walking along the road a few hundred yards away, he noticed that a van had stopped by a dead animal. At first, he thought it was a kitten, but as he drew near he saw that it wasn’t. The van driver said it was a mink, and that there were quite a lot around the area. It was a deep chocolate brown, but had gone by the time my husband could return with a camera. We must have had a nocturnal visitor that night, because the next morning an earth-filled tub, a heavy plant trough and the pump in the pond had all been knocked over. Maybe a cat, or even a fox. It was much colder than the previous few days, and by the 11th, it was bitterly cold. There were a few snow flurries, though hawthorn was starting to bloom in some of the hedgerows. On March 13th I was delighted to see a song thrush on a roadside verge in Sawbridgeworth, because thrushes seem to be disappearing around here. Once, they were regulars to the garden, feeding on the snails and leaving cracked shells as evidence, but I hadn’t seen one for several years. On her way to work, my daughter saw a pair of kestrels in flight and also three tumbling magpies – she was worried they would fall into the path of the car. We had a few snow flurries during the day, and it snowed a bit more in the evening, dusting the bushes, plants and grass with a sprinkling of white, though had melted away by mid-morning of March 14th. On the 15th of March there was a dead smooth newt in the pond, possibly one that had climbed inside the pump – my husband said he had removed one a couple of days ago.
A visit to Hatfield Forest on March 18th was a delight. It was sunny, with blue skies and fairy mild, a respite before the severely cold weather front that the Met Office have been forecasting arrives. As we drove along the roads leading to the forest, a swirling mist drifted across from the ploughed fields. At the forest, the ground was really plashy in places, with small rivulets forming on the grass, but it was a very enjoyable walk, though I was thankful I was wearing wellingtons as there was plenty of mud, to say nothing of deep puddles. There was a cormorant perched at the top of a tree, his prehistoric-looking beak and neck looking quite surreal when the sun caught the white skin patches on its head. There were cormorants with young on the lake at Hatfield Forest last summer.
Along the track the magnificent London Plane tree was still completely bare, its twisty branches arching high above. Whatever the season this tree is a joy to behold, whether in full leaf, spring bud, autumn gold or in the depths of winter when its contorted grey/white branches show to their best advantage. The track near this tree follows a long, narrow stretch of water, a kind of top-up to the main lake, and along parts of the bank, in the softest mud, were many deer prints. This section of the water is fairly still, and, unlike the bustle of the main lake, is much quieter with just a few coots, moorhens and mallard. Occasionally I see a heron here, wading the shallows, and have seen a kingfisher, too. Sometimes there are nuthatches in the trees along the path. A heron flew over, silhouetted against the sky, and a dozen or so jackdaws were busily gathering nesting material on the grass on the opposite side to the plane tree. There are many jackdaws at Hatfield Forest, their ‘chacking’ forms an accompaniment to a walk along this stretch,
On the lake were grebes, mallards, coots, black-headed gulls, Canada geese and greylag geese. Many of them had paired up, swimming around in couples. However, everything seemed very placid, with none of the usual mating routines in evidence. There was no sign of the swans while we were there; usually there are a couple on the lake near the jetty. The gulls have now regained their black (actually chocolate-brown) heads after their winter plumage of a white head with a black comma-shaped mark.
There were grey squirrels chasing each other in the wood and rummaging in the leaf litter for food, and a rabbit popped out from a bush then smartly retreated when it saw us. We caught sight of a couple of muntjac deer, running across the track. Muntjac and fallow deer are found in the forest. The pussy willow was now fluffy; a couple of weeks ago when I last visited it was still in tight bud, but now it really did resemble the texture of a kitten’s paw. The bramble bushes were showing new buds and there was coltsfoot in bloom, making a welcome splash of yellow along the path by the lake. Usually by now there are dandelions along here, too, and plenty of new leaves on the bushes. The water was so still that the reflections of trees, ducks and clouds were crystal clear.
March 20th was meant to be the first day of spring, though traditionalists like me still think of the 21st as being the day to celebrate. Surprisingly, the Meteorological Office had earlier proclaimed that the first day of March was the first day of spring. As far as I’m concerned, spring arrives mid-March. I don’t think that the Met Office should alter the date of the seasons which have been the same for centuries. Apparently MPs are quite disgruntled that the Met Office has changed the traditional date, apparently on a whim, just to make things simpler. There were two robins in the garden, one feeding the other. My daughter reported seeing a dead polecat along the motorway just outside Bishops Stortford. She said there was no mistaking that classic face.
I spent a long while on the 21st watching a crow perched on a thin branch of a tree across the road, determinedly trying to snap off a twig, presumably from its nest. It finally succeeded and flew down to claim the fallen bounty. March 23rd saw heavy snow, which covered much of the country. It was accompanied by biting winds. Most unusually, there were two magpies in the garden at the feeding trays, they must have been desperate for food, as they are usually very wary of coming into the garden. The starlings came down too, and the wood pigeons hung around gorging till it was almost dark. This fresh fall of heavy snow will cause plenty of wildlife disruption, as many birds had started nesting and frogs and toads were spawning. The weight of the snow broke many of the daffodil stems, just as they were about to flower, and no doubt the cold will freeze many of the buds that were just beginning to show on the bushes.
According to reports on March 26th, waxwings are back in the area, but a visit to the likely spots failed to show any signs of those exotic-looking birds. There is still plenty of snow and the crocuses are pushing their way through. All the usual garden birds, such as robins, sparrows, starlings and wood pigeons, are still around, and there are black-headed gulls overhead. One gull flew past, quite low, as I opened the back door and twisted its head around to look at me – so in effect, it was flying blind! March 27th revealed a dead wood pigeon by the side of the road – later, the bird had disappeared but there were feathers scattered along the pavement. Maybe the bird was brought down by a sparrowhawk, which later returned to claim it, or perhaps was hit by a car and then an opportunist raptor had taken it. Certainly something seemed to have plucked those feathers. I have from time to time found piles of feathers around our garden and the area just outside, and have also seen sparrowhawks skimming the hedge.
The next day, the 28th March, was slightly milder though still very cold. The crocuses were beautiful in the sun with their purple, gold and white cups, and the daffodils were trying to open. A blue tit was investigating a nest box – after the burst of activity last month, they seemed to have given up, probably because it was more important to find food and conserve energy. There were three robins in the garden which is a very unusual sight considering the small size of the plot. Several times lately we have spotted herons flying over the town, so there must be a nearby heronry.
Dunnocks are often overlooked, but are handsome birds |
The last day of the month coincided with Easter Sunday – March 31st was very cold, the coldest Easter since records began. Although the snow had melted here, it was still snowing in many other parts of the country. Birds in the garden included starlings, sparrows, robins, dunnock, wood pigeon, blackbirds and blue tit. Special visitors to the feeder were two long-tailed tits. It was good to see them back again, and hopefully they will nest locally. We do see them most years, their musical twitter announcing their presence when they arrive. As yet there has been no sign of the coal tits, and I just hope that they haven’t perished in the snow, though we have been putting out plenty of food. Beautiful as they are, I sometimes wish that the wood pigeons didn’t spend so much time on the food trays, as they prevent the smaller species from feeding. They take so much of the seed that we supply. The squirrel was down again as well, coming across from the tall oak tree opposite the garden, on the other side of the road. It likes the peanuts on the tray, and is a very dainty eater.
Annoyingly, the unseasonably cold weather has been forecast for much of the month of April, and I just hope that the weather predictions are wrong.
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