There was a hull of a hellabaloo outside the house yesterday. There I was ‘stood sitting there’ as Hilda Baker might have said, reading my book about the life of John Steinbeck when it all started kicking off up on the telegraph wire. There was this little chap chirping its beak off, loudly, and non-stop, apparently for no other reason than a good chat. There were more of his kind in and around the pomegranate tree, though they were all too small to catch on my phone’s camera to any decent extent. I’m not sure what bird they are. I think they might be a kind of warbler, or a chiffchaff. Noisy things when they get chatting.
You might need to turn the sound up on this short video I took, but believe me, it was a lot louder in real life.
I carried on reading about America’s most successful author of the 40s (that’s as far as I’ve got so far), and the racket in the trees got worse. A blackbird came to join in, and sat up on the wire clacking like that old Remington typewriter I mentioned yesterday. Flitting back and forth, having a good old go about the price of a sunbed, or ‘boat people’ or something, and I put my reading aside to do some detective work. It didn’t take long to find the cause of the Great Matter playing out in front of me, and there it was:

It (its preferred pronoun) was sitting so still and was so camouflaged by the background, I’d not noticed it. It was a little like the spider in the kitchen this morning. I’d made a cup of tea, and was just leaving the room when I saw one rappelling down the cutlery drawer. It must have been right next to me as I pottered about, but I’d not seen it despite its size. ‘Ooh, one of the biggest I’ve seen,’ the husband enthuses as he wraps it in a towel and takes it for a walk down the lane to rehome it (making sure, this time, it doesn’t leap onto his head).
Back a scene: I wasn’t able to get a good shot of the cause of the disturbance from that angle, as you might be able to see, so I went next door to my office and managed to get one with the sea behind it.

The owl just sat there, only occasionally turning its head, and did nothing for a whole chapter, by which time, I was growing tired of the noise. I was just about to go inside when the owl, after a couple of good scratches, flew to the building opposite, and perched directly above where the chiffchaffs (or whoever) have nested in the tree. Well, the blackbird wasn’t having that, so it tried to scare the owl away by dive bombing it, flying past so close, the owl was obliged to ruffle its feathers, but refused to budge.

I had to leave them to it in the end, but when I came back to the scene a while later, it was all very quiet. The owl had gone, either with or without its afternoon tea, and calm of some sort had been restored. Until the next time.
Anyway, have a good weekend, and yes, I did mean to say ‘hull of a hellabaloo’ because it sounds like a line from a Disney song that way.









