My A-Z posts this year
are based on my garden – flowers, animals, the birds and the bees, butterflies
- with a bit of poetry thrown in. For some letters I am expecting to cheat
somewhat –wishing they were here.
W – Wagtail,
Wallflower, Weigela, Woodpecker, Wood Pigeon, Wren.
It seems strange to call this fellow grey, when really he is
anything but,
 |
Grey Wagtail on dock wall at the Tees Barrage |
There is no better description of the one that has visited
our garden that that by John Clare. He obviously studied this bird.
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Pied Wagtail |
Little trotty wagtail
he went in the rain,
And tittering,
tottering sideways he ne'er got straight again,
He stooped to get a
worm, and looked up to get a fly,
And then he flew away
ere his feathers they were dry.
Our village is in North Yorkshire so I was pleased to find a verse in
dialect that ended:
Folk ‘at’s tired gits
churlish
An’ starts t’ owd
World’s disorders—
Ther’d be less
quarrels if they grew
Wallflowers I’ their
borders.
 |
Wallflowers |
The wallflowers in our border
however have set themselves; they appear every year no matter how many we pull
up.
As I could not find another ‘W’ flower
we grow I have had to make do with a shrub,
 |
Weigela Bush (and Foxglove) |
I mentioned one species of
woodpecker under ‘L’, but the most recent visitor is the Greater Spotted
variety – a bird that moves so quickly it’s difficult to photograph. I wrote
about it separately
here.
 |
Greater Spotted Woodpecker |
But the top bird in our garden
and certainly the most numerous is this one in the sycamore tree.
 |
Wood Pigeon |
And in the bird bath which it
thinks it owns.
 |
Bird Bath (between Potentilla and the Rose) |
Nesting in the hedge alongside
the garden shed.
 |
Nesting Wood Pigeon |
Despite its presence the bird
that, for its size, surprises you most with the strength of its song remains:
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Jenny Wren |
Small
and pert she hops around
Hither
and thither all over the ground
Speckled
and neat her rich brown coat
Pale
eyebrow and buff coloured throat
Poems:
- Little Trotty Wagtail – John Clare
- Wallflowers – Dorothy Una Ratcliffe
- Jenny Wren – Bumpsysmum
Photos:
- Pied Wagtail – Ken Billington – CC
BY-SA 3.0
- Wren – Ken Billington – CC BY-SA 3.0