Yew berries. |
Despite the sun and the blue sky, today is a very windy day, due to the remains of two Caribbean hurricanes that are passing through the UK, bringing a fall of American birds to our west coast and our most far-flung Atlantic islands. There is a cinematic blizzard of golden and brown leaves between the headstones that could denote the passage of time but, because of the strong wind, my chances of catching any small birds out in the open are limited.
A headstone spattered with fallen berries. |
Blue tits hunt spiders in a cedar nearby and a pair of extremely shy blackbirds cluck in the undergrowth. They explode skywards as I approach and I wonder if these are the first winter visitors to the church-yard. After all, unlike their wilder Scandinavian brethren, English blackbirds are not generally bothered by my presence. Two song thrushes flit from a hawthorn bush: definitely song thrushes, redwings are darker in hue and it's too soon for them to be here.
Shaggy parasols, ignored in the churchyard but very much edible. |
In fact, the last swallows and martins are still saying their farewells and the neighbouring wetlands along the Great Ouse valley are still rich in insects such as dragonflies that attract the last few hobby-falcons of the season.
In my graveyard, I watch the last of the summer's butterflies sunning themselves on an ancient sun-bathed wall. A fresh-looking red admiral and a faded and battered speckled wood are attracted to the tendrils of flowering ivy that cling to a memorial stone. They need to keep sharp because predatory hornets are patrolling the sunny glades. Under a faded buddleia, I find a pile of butterfly wings that the hornets have discarded.
All the conkers on the village green are gone, but children shun the graveyard. |
In autumn, it's a place ripe with metaphors for death and decay but that's not what I see. It's an ancient man-made woodland habitat that holds it own special mix of residents and attracts a good range of migrants, and that's ignoring the church itself with its hibernating bats.
Etched letters in stone |
The great thing about churchyards is that they give you perspective; a long term view. It's not just all those graves with their headstones dating back through the centuries, even though they are so interesting in themselves. Have you ever noticed how few and how localised the names on the stones were only a hundred years ago?
Gargoyle. What animal is this? Can we re-introduce them? |
But all of this twaddle can be set aside if you like.
The fact remains that graveyards are just great places to see wildlife and to grab a bit of peace, especially in an urban setting. Visit yours and tell me what you see.
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