Saturday 1 May 2021

Our Feathered Friends

 

Spring is celebrated in many forms around the world and across India. The season of rebirth and re-greening is deified in many cultures and mythologies of goddesses of spring and fertility abound.  It dovetails with the regional celebrations of New Year and Harvest in the Indian subcontinent and neighbourhood (Puthandu, Vishu, Chaitra Navratri, Ramadan, Cheti Chand, Pratipada, Jur Sital/Jude Sheetal, Baisakhi, Navreh, Bikoti, Bohag Bihu, Cheiraoba, Poila/Bengali Boishak, Sajibu nongma panba, Pana Sankranti, Naba Barsha, Sarhul, Gudi Padwa, Ugadi as well as Avurudu/Aluth Avurudda/Sinhala New Year & Songkran/Thai New Year or Water festival of Myanmar, Laos & Cambodia)


 


 March 20, which is the vernal equinox in the Northern Hemisphere is observed as World Sparrow Day as well as the International Day of Happiness. As I tweeted, this is apt as observing sparrows makes me happy.


I'll elaborate, bird-watching makes me happy and nothing makes me happier than spotting them in my backyard and garden. My interest in nature and the environment was kindled by feathered visitors who appeared in my childhood campus which was filled with greenery as well as being close to the beach. Sparrows used to regularly fly into our flat and my bedroom and investigate the mirror on my Godrej almirah  (steel cupboard) and the braver ones used to even sit on me as took an afternoon nap. The very best memories. 

The fact that my school campus also abounded with fruit trees teeming with bird life and the occasional monkey gangs added to my early interest in bird life. So yay again for Sishya - the best school in my opinion for so many reasons those days. I always looked forward to meeting my friends and feathered friends there and hated missing even a day of school. 



In my present residence although I am further away from the beach, thanks to a survival of the fittest garden, I get a lot of winged visitors - both birds and bats!!! As writer and birdwatcher Christy Bharath tweeted with the wonderful video compilation of ECR birds - the East Coast Road is not just a scenic route but a birder's paradise.


But it is our feathered friends who brighten the day as the noisily welcome dawn and dusk as well as being extra active during springtime. Here, inside my home, its tailor birds who are more frequent visitors and it is only this past year that a couple of sparrows have entered. They are cherished whether I come across them inside or out. My vision might be poor, but while I may look through/overlook people and inevitably fail to recognize them immediately when coming across them unexpectedly, birds always catch my eye, especially unexpected sightings. 


Be it Ostara/Eostre, the Goddess of Spring (Eastern European/Germanic/Wiccan) and her celebration of rebirth co-opted in Easter as shown in the series American Gods or the return of the Greek/Roman Spring goddess Kore/Presephone, from her time in the underworld with her husband Hades to her mother the Goddess of grain and harvest Demeter (the Webtoon, Lore Olympus retells this beautifully), spring is made glorious by greenery,  gardens, grain and birdsong. 

The book Effin' Birds by Aaron Reynolds and Twitter handle @EffinBirds combines beautiful bird illustrations and pithy profanity both very useful in making one feel better. 












 
Pic: Shikra
Pics: Sunbird nest and sunbird in flight and on a Hibiscus branch.

Pics: Tailor Bird fledglings/chicks - newly hatched in Hibiscus leaf nest.


Pic: Water Hen on my garden wall.

I am spiritually enriched by the presence and appearance of our feathered friends. The extract from Dorothy Francis Gurney's poem God's Garden beautifully rendered as a glass painting pictured at the start of this post resonates with me. And recent research has found that birds give people as much happiness as money in the bank! In these days of high uncertainty and high anxiety due to the devastation of the COVID-19 second wave, simple pleasures are worth their weight in gold.

It is only over the past six years that I recognized and distinguished bird calls especially the laugh-like call of the Kingfisher. The Laughing Kookaburra song which I learnt in junior school suddenly made sense - the laughing jackass after all is a relative from down under. Thanks to the internet and the resources it has made available, school kids and those interested can get to learn a lot more even without first-hand bird encounters. 

Socially distanced bird walks still happen in the city (Check out EFI events #NativesOfOurLakes), but apps such as e-bird make it easier still. Rohan Chakravarthy summarizes it best in his cartoon from last April, during first lockdown, professional bird-watchers feel the pinch but balcony bird-watchers reaped the benefit of the forced slowing down of life that made many of us look up from devices and appreciate the natural world. 


Source: Green Humour, April 4, 2020.
Rohan's book for the Bombay Natural History Society, Bird Business is a delight as are all his cartoons especially those related to bird-watching!

As we are buffeted by the daily realities and perils of the pandemic, let's look to nature and nurture it, so that it may nurture us. As summer approaches and the heat and humidity becomes unbearable thanks to global warming and the climate catastrophe we have precipitated, remember to set out water for our feathered friends. Every little bit helps, for birds and beasts - as the actions of the Water King of Kenya for the past five year's drought season demonstrates.